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{{Infobox |title = Tetris X
{{Infobox |title = Tetris X
|developer =  
|developer = [[Bullet Proof Software]]
|publisher =  
|publisher = [[Bullet Proof Software]]
|released = March 29, 1996
|released = '''Tetris X'''<br>March 29, 1996<br>'''Tetris X The Best'''<br>June 27, 1997
|platform =  
|platform = PlayStation
|boxart = Tetris_X_Cover.jpg
|title-scrn = TetrisX title.png
|ingame-scrn = TetrisX ingame1.png
|preview = 1
|playfield= 10x22 Classic mode, <br>7x17 Battle mode
|hold = No
|hard = No
|system = [[SRS]] predecessor. Wallkicks 1 cell left or right.
}}
}}


[[Category:Games List]]
'''''Tetris X''''', released for PlayStation in Japan, is notable for being the first game officially released for a non-Nintendo console, after the Tetris rights reverted to [[Alexey Pajitnov]] in 1996. [[The Tetris Company]] had been set up and had signed an agreement with Sony, giving a three year licensing right for the release of Tetris on the PlayStation in both Japan and the US. The game features a "Classic" single player mode, and a competitive "Battle" mode that allows up to 4 players to compete against each other.
 
==Rotation System==
The basic rotation is almost identical to that used in [[SRS]], the one exception being the ''I'' tetromino: the spawn state, and the state achieved after 2 rotations in the same sense (a net 180&deg; rotation) are swapped. Therefore, the ''I'' tetromino does not have a single rotation centre.
 
The [[wallkick]] behavior, however, is more akin to [[TGM Rotation|ARS]], in that kicks are possible one cell left and right. Innovatively, there is no asymmetry (see [[ARS#Mihara.27s_conspiracy|Mihara's Conspiracy]]); the player is able to choose whether the tetromino will kick left or right by holding the appropriate direction on the d-pad. If no direction is held while the tetromino is rotated, no wallkick is tested.
 
==Classic mode==
A standard endless game of Tetris. The player's starting level is determined by the selected difficulty: "Easy", "Normal", "Hard" and "Expert" begin at levels 0, 11, 51 and 120 respectively. The player scores points and advances levels by clearing lines. No drop-scoring is awarded. For a given level, n, the player must clear a cumulative total of '''10(n+1) lines''' to advance to the next level, and the scoring is as follows:
*single: 40(n+1) points
*double: 100(n+1) points
*triple: 300(n+1) points
*tetris: 1200(n+1) points
 
The level counter stops increasing at level 200 (so the maximum possible amount of points from a tetris clear is 241200). The lines counter stops increasing at 9999 lines. The score counter supports only 8 digits, and upon exceeding 99999990, the score is entirely replaced by the Japanese characters "いちおくてん" ("one hundred million points"), and stops increasing. However, after topping-out, the score is displayed as 100000000 in digits on the high score table.
 
==Battle mode==
 
[[Image:TetrisX battle4p.png|right|thumb|200px|A screenshot showing ''Tetris X'''s 4 player battle mode]]
 
Up to 4 human (or CPU) players can compete against each other with the aid of a multitap. Graphically, this mode is in stark contrast with the rest of the game, and in fact uses the cartoon-style characters from [[Tetris Battle Gaiden]]. Unusual features in this mode include the playfield size of 7x17, the facility to stockpile garbage lines before sending them to opponents, and the ability to choose which opponent to target when sending garbage lines.
 
== External links ==
*[http://www.din.or.jp/~koryan/tetris/d-psx.htm Koryan's page on Tetris X]
*[https://tcrf.net/Tetris_X The Cutting Room Floor on Tetris X]
 
{{Bullet-Proof Software games}}
 
[[Category:Official Tetris games]]
[[Category:PlayStation games]]

Revision as of 17:49, 12 January 2020

Tetris X
Tetris X Cover.jpg
Developer(s)Bullet Proof Software
Publisher(s)Bullet Proof Software
Platform(s)PlayStation
ReleaseTetris X
March 29, 1996
Tetris X The Best
June 27, 1997
Gameplay info
Next pieces1
Playfield size10x22 Classic mode,
7x17 Battle mode
Hold pieceNo
Hard dropNo
Rotation systemSRS predecessor. Wallkicks 1 cell left or right.
TetrisX title.png
TetrisX ingame1.png

Tetris X, released for PlayStation in Japan, is notable for being the first game officially released for a non-Nintendo console, after the Tetris rights reverted to Alexey Pajitnov in 1996. The Tetris Company had been set up and had signed an agreement with Sony, giving a three year licensing right for the release of Tetris on the PlayStation in both Japan and the US. The game features a "Classic" single player mode, and a competitive "Battle" mode that allows up to 4 players to compete against each other.

Rotation System

The basic rotation is almost identical to that used in SRS, the one exception being the I tetromino: the spawn state, and the state achieved after 2 rotations in the same sense (a net 180° rotation) are swapped. Therefore, the I tetromino does not have a single rotation centre.

The wallkick behavior, however, is more akin to ARS, in that kicks are possible one cell left and right. Innovatively, there is no asymmetry (see Mihara's Conspiracy); the player is able to choose whether the tetromino will kick left or right by holding the appropriate direction on the d-pad. If no direction is held while the tetromino is rotated, no wallkick is tested.

Classic mode

A standard endless game of Tetris. The player's starting level is determined by the selected difficulty: "Easy", "Normal", "Hard" and "Expert" begin at levels 0, 11, 51 and 120 respectively. The player scores points and advances levels by clearing lines. No drop-scoring is awarded. For a given level, n, the player must clear a cumulative total of 10(n+1) lines to advance to the next level, and the scoring is as follows:

  • single: 40(n+1) points
  • double: 100(n+1) points
  • triple: 300(n+1) points
  • tetris: 1200(n+1) points

The level counter stops increasing at level 200 (so the maximum possible amount of points from a tetris clear is 241200). The lines counter stops increasing at 9999 lines. The score counter supports only 8 digits, and upon exceeding 99999990, the score is entirely replaced by the Japanese characters "いちおくてん" ("one hundred million points"), and stops increasing. However, after topping-out, the score is displayed as 100000000 in digits on the high score table.

Battle mode

A screenshot showing Tetris X's 4 player battle mode

Up to 4 human (or CPU) players can compete against each other with the aid of a multitap. Graphically, this mode is in stark contrast with the rest of the game, and in fact uses the cartoon-style characters from Tetris Battle Gaiden. Unusual features in this mode include the playfield size of 7x17, the facility to stockpile garbage lines before sending them to opponents, and the ability to choose which opponent to target when sending garbage lines.

External links