Shoot the Bullet
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東方文花帖 〜 Shoot the Bullet. |
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Developer(s) | Team Shanghai Alice |
Publisher(s) | Team Shanghai Alice |
Version | 1.02a |
Platform(s) | Windows 2000/XP |
Release date | December 30, 2005 |
Genre(s) | Bullet hell |
System requirements | Pentium 800MHz, 140MB hard disk, Direct3D, DirectX 8, VRAM 32M, DirectSound, 128MB RAM |
Touhou Bunkachou ~ Shoot the Bullet. (東方文花帖 〜 Shoot the Bullet.?) is a danmaku vertical-scrolling photography game, and is the ninth-and-a-half official game in the Touhou Project by the dōjin circle Team Shanghai Alice. It was first released in the 69th Comiket in December 30, 2005. In English speaking circles, the game's title is often shortened to just Shoot the Bullet, and abbreviated to StB.
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[edit] Gameplay
In Shoot the Bullet, unlike other shoot 'em ups, the player cannot shoot projectiles at enemies; instead, Aya, the main character, must shoot photographs to clear the screen of bullets and take down bosses (hence "Shoot" the Bullet). Scores are determined by the aesthetics of each photograph taken, such as colours and bullet density, and the risk taken to take these photos. For each "scene", Aya is only given one life to complete the objective — to take a certain number of pictures of the boss without being hit in a limited amount of time.
To take pictures, the film must be fully loaded into the camera (100%). There are three modes of loading, each with different speeds — the faster the film loads, the slower the players moves. When taking pictures, the player can hold the shoot button to control the viewfinder while the picture frame shrinks — this can be used to zoom in on the boss. During this time, all bullets on screen are slowed down and Aya cannot move. If the shoot button is held for too long, the film will get exposed and Aya would have to reload the film. The player can also press the shoot button once without holding to take a snapshot around Aya. For every picture taken, Aya will need to reload the film from 0% again before she can take another picture. Only photos that contain an image of the boss ("Success" pictures) will be taken into account when tallying up the score.
[edit] Characters
- The main character of Shoot the Bullet. As the tengu reporter of the Gensokyo newspaper Bunbunmaru Shinbun, she goes to search for suitable news topics by taking pictures of bullet patterns with her analog camera. No one actually knows what she does with these pictures except herself.
The subjects: (all bosses from past Windows Touhou Project instalments)
- Level 1: Rumia, Wriggle Nightbug
- Level 2: Cirno, Letty Whiterock
- Level 3: Alice Margatroid, Keine Kamishirasawa
- Level 4: Reisen U. Inaba, Medicine Melancholy, Tewi Inaba
- Level 5: Hong Meiling, Patchouli Knowledge
- Level 6: Chen, Youmu Konpaku
- Level 7: Sakuya Izayoi, Remilia Scarlet
- Level 8: Ran Yakumo, Yuyuko Saigyouzi
- Level 9: Eirin Yagokoro, Kaguya Houraisan
- Level 10: Komachi Onozuka, Sikieiki Yamaxanadu
- Level Ex: Frandre Scarlet, Yukari Yakumo, Fujiwara no Mokou, Suika Ibuki
[edit] Development
The only member of Team Shanghai Alice, who goes by the pseudonym "ZUN", recognized that all past instalments of the Touhou Project drew inspiration from arcade games, so he wanted to turn all that around and make an experimental PC game that throws arcade conventions aside.[1]
The idea of a danmaku photography game first came to ZUN when he was taking snapshots of bullet patterns during the production of Embodiment of Scarlet Devil so that he could name them into "spell cards" to distinguish one pattern from another. He realized that taking snapshots was quite fun, and the idea should make a good game. After Embodiment of Scarlet Devil, ZUN tried to incorporate this idea into a new weapon type for Reimu Hakurei (the main character of the Touhou Project) where she would take pictures and seal away bullets. However, ZUN felt that he was forcing a totally new idea into the game unnaturally, since none of the characters in the games had a reason to shoot photos; so he filed the idea away for two years until after Imperishable Night was released.[2]
ZUN decided that in order to introduce the idea naturally, he needed a character who actually had a reason to shoot photographs. Thus he created the reporter girl Aya Shameimaru and planned to introduce her in the upcoming game Phantasmagoria of Flower View so that she can become the main character of a future photography game without being too abrupt. During this process, the manga publisher Ichijinsha was planning a manga anthology of Touhou Project dōjinshi, but ZUN decided that he can use this opportunity to introduce Aya, and negotiated with Ichijinsha to turn the anthology into a fanbook that contains samplings of Aya's newspaper. The result was Touhou Bunkachou ~ Bohemian Archive of Japanese Red., which was released three days before Phantasmagoria of Flower View. ZUN had originally planned to include the photography game along with the fanbook, but ZUN did not have enough time to make that happen. Even so, ZUN continued to use the name "Touhou Bunkachou" for his photography game without Ichijinsha's authorization (although Ichijinsha later agreed to let ZUN use the name). Development took a month and a half to finish[2], and the game Touhou Bunkachou ~ Shoot the Bullet. was finally released on December 30, 2005.
[edit] Post-release
On January 9, 2006, ZUN added an empty level called "Gōgai" (号外? "Extra" in the newspaper sense) after Level Ex with the version 1.01a patch, with the promise that he would add playable stages in it at a later time.[3] On October 16, 2006, however, ZUN announced that he will not make the "Gōgai" stages since he does not have the time and he would rather move forward onto new projects,[4] thus leaving an empty level hanging in Shoot the Bullet.
In addition to being a standalone game, Shoot the Bullet became something of a game engine on which ZUN's future games base on. Mountain of Faith[5] and Uwabami Breakers (Drinking Party, 2007)[6] are two games which use Shoot the Bullet as their prototype.
[edit] References
- ^ 「東方」制作者インタビュー「シューティングの方法論」第3回. 4Gamer.net. Retrieved on 2008-6-05.
- ^ a b ZUN, "Shanghai Alice Correspondence Vol.7". Shoot the Bullet Afterword. 2005-12-30.
- ^ Shoot the Bullet ver1.01a. Invisible Games and Japanese. 2006-1-09.
- ^ "October Resurrection". Invisible Games and Japanese. 2006-10-16.
- ^ “神主ZUN、『風神録』についてかく話りき!”, Chara Mel (Ichijinsha): pg.106, 2007-11-10
- ^ ルー後書き.txt. Uwabami Breakers: Staff Notes. Retrieved on 2008-6-10.