Sega Tetris: Difference between revisions
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Colour thief (talk | contribs) →Battle mode: Added proper names and got more specific about the exact attack effects. |
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{| class="wikitable" | {| class="wikitable" | ||
|+ Attacks | |+ Attacks | ||
! Double | ! Double (Joint Attack) | ||
| | | The defending player must choose how to join two [[tetromino]]s in the next queue, and then place it in the playfield. The center of rotation is that of the base piece. | ||
|- | |- | ||
! Triple | ! Triple (Special Long Block Attack) | ||
| [[ | | A single horizontal [[garbage]] line falls from the top. It will have a hole in the column that cleared the triple. | ||
|- | |- | ||
! Tetris | ! Tetris (Upper Attack) | ||
| Four | | Four [[garbage]] lines are sent. The garbage hole will be in the column that cleared the Tetris. | ||
|- | |- | ||
! Split Double | ! Split Double (Missile Attack) | ||
| | | Fire a missile that makes a T-spin shaped hole in the opponent's stack. It will aim somewhere high on the opponent's playfield. | ||
|- | |- | ||
! Split Triple | ! One-Two Split Triple (K.O. Attack) | ||
| Knock opponent unconscious, | | Knock opponent unconscious, letting pieces fall slowly onto the stack. Pressing buttons quickly is required to wake up. | ||
|- | |- | ||
|} | |} |
Revision as of 16:09, 28 June 2022
- This article is about the 1999-2000 arcade and Dreamcast version. For the 1988 arcade version, see Tetris (Sega).
Sega Tetris | |
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Developer(s) |
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Publisher(s) | Sega |
Platform(s) | Sega NAOMI Sega Dreamcast |
Release |
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Gameplay info | |
Next pieces | 1 |
Playfield size | 10 × 18 |
Hold piece | No |
Hard drop | No |
Rotation system | Sega Rotation with wallkicks (Only kicks playfield's wall. Not the locked tetrominos.) |
Sega Tetris (セガテトリス Sega Tetorisu) is a video game published by Sega for the NAOMI arcade platform and Dreamcast home consoles in Japan. It is reminiscent to Sega's earlier Tetris titles, featuring a similar rotation system, changing backgrounds, and a monkey as the primary mascot.
Gameplay
Single player
There are three available difficulties, easy, normal, and difficult. There is also an option to play with join block mechanic from the battle mode.
Battle mode
Double (Joint Attack) | The defending player must choose how to join two tetrominos in the next queue, and then place it in the playfield. The center of rotation is that of the base piece. |
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Triple (Special Long Block Attack) | A single horizontal garbage line falls from the top. It will have a hole in the column that cleared the triple. |
Tetris (Upper Attack) | Four garbage lines are sent. The garbage hole will be in the column that cleared the Tetris. |
Split Double (Missile Attack) | Fire a missile that makes a T-spin shaped hole in the opponent's stack. It will aim somewhere high on the opponent's playfield. |
One-Two Split Triple (K.O. Attack) | Knock opponent unconscious, letting pieces fall slowly onto the stack. Pressing buttons quickly is required to wake up. |
UFO Catcher
UFO Catcher is a minigame available to play from the main menu. After earning virtual currency during regular gameplay, the player can spend it by playing this minigame to unlock playable characters.
The minigame works similarly to UFO catchers found in Japanese game centers.
- Press A to insert coin(s).
- Press Start to start the minigame.
- The player can look around with the directional buttons.
- The player presses and holds A to move the arm right. Once they let go they can no longer move it left or right.
- The player presses and holds A a second and last time to move the arm away from them.
- The arm then descends and grabs.
- If the player succeeded in catching a prize, it is added to their collection which can be viewed by pressing X.
Completing various challenges in Sega Tetris, will add new characters to the UFO Catcher minigame. They will only be playable if the player catches them in the minigame.
Connectivity
Sega Tetris supports a few of the connectivity options on the Dreamcast. When connecting to the internet or VS Cable to play, up to 4 players are supported.
Net play
As of November 30, 2002, Net play is no longer supported.[1]
Dreamcast VS Cable
The Dreamcast VS Cable allows you to connect two Dreamcast consoles together similar to a link cable, or crossover cable. It is one of only four games to support the Dreamcast VS Cable.
Physical scans
See also
References
External links
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