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Pistol Daimyo no Bouken : ウィキペディア英語版
Pistol Daimyo no Bōken

is a Horizontal scrolling shooter arcade game, which was released by Namco in 1990 only in Japan; it runs on Namco System 1 hardware, and was the last game from the company to have two players alternating turns at the controls except for the carbon copies of ''Pac-Man'', ''Rally-X'', ''Galaga'', ''Dig Dug'', ''Xevious'' and ''Mappy'' which were a part of the compilation arcade games ''Namco Classic Collection Vol. 1'' and ''2''. It is also spin-off of ''Beraboh Man'', as the game's main character (who is the eponymous "Pistol Daimyo") first appeared in the eighth and twenty-second stages of that game as a boss who put up an invisible wall in front of himself.
==Gameplay==
As mentioned above, the player must take control of Pistol Daimyo, a small Japanese lord, who has a pistol strapped to his head (and two fans strapped to his feet); he faces to the right side of the screen, and is always moving forward with the backgrounds scrolling to the left, bringing enemies into view, which are very reminiscent of ''Monty Python's Flying Circus''. Similar to Kissy, Takky, and Hommy from ''Baraduke'' and ''Bakutotsu Kijūtei'', he will float down to the ground if you stop holding the joystick up while he is in mid-air - and pressing that Firing Button will make his pistol fire a small cannonball. However, holding down the button will charge the pistol (much like Alice's bubble blower in ''Märchen Maze'', and Apollo's sword in ''Phelios''), and on releasing the button the pistol will fire a medium or large cannonball; but even the smallest enemies take multiple hits to kill, so the small cannonballs are of little use. There's also blue (and yellow) vases which can be broken open with a medium or large cannonball, and will leave ''Hanafuda'' ) cards behind, for Pistol Daimyo to collect - and once he collects three of them, it shall cause a ''Kusudama'' ball to come down into view from the top of the screen (which can also be broken open with a medium or large cannonball). If he manages to do it before it goes back up off the top of the screen again, it shall leave a suit of wooden (or metal if he is already wearing the wooden one) armour behind; once he has put it on, it shall prevent him from getting killed after a single hit.
This game was never released in the United States, probably due to its slightly questionable content; when Pistol Daimyo gets killed after being hit without any armour, players have to watch him dance naked (using his fans to hide his shame), as he falls off the bottom of the screen. Also, at the end of the game, he is seen dancing fully clothed in front of a picture (which caricatures the game's staff) on a beach, and the bald person upon the extreme right of the picture is completely naked (but again, he is doing a dance in mid-air and positioned his right leg to hide his shame).〔(Pistol Daimyo no Bōken at MamEnd )〕

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
ウィキペディアで「Pistol Daimyo no Bōken」の詳細全文を読む



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