Gurumin: A Monstrous Adventure

Gurumin

Developer(s) Nihon Falcom
Publisher(s)
Platform(s) PC, PlayStation Portable
Release date(s) Windows
  • JP December 25, 2004
PlayStation Portable
  • JP June 29, 2006
  • NA February 13, 2007
  • PAL March 23, 2007
Genre(s) Action-adventure game
Mode(s) Single player
Rating(s)
Media/distribution CD-ROM/DVD-ROM (PC)
UMD (PSP)
System requirements

OS: Windows 98/Me/2000/XP
CPU: Intel Pentium III 800 MHz (Intel Pentium III 1 GHz recommended)
RAM: 192MB (256MB recommended) (Windows 98/Me)
256MB (384MB recommended) (Windows 2000/XP)
Hard drive space: 1.3GB
Display: 32MB VRAM, DirectX 8.1 compatible 3D accelerator

Gurumin: A Monstrous Adventure, known simply as Gurumin (ぐるみん) in Japan, is an action/adventure video game developed by Nihon Falcom Corporation. Originally released on December 25, 2004 for PC. A PSP version was later released in Japan on June 29, 2006 and North America on February 13, 2007.

The actual origin of the title "Gurumin" has never been officially explained, but it's likely a combination of the Japanese word "guruguru" (basically an onomatopoeia for spinning) and the kanji 民 (min), which means "people". So ぐる民 "gurumin" could potentially be interpreted as "people of spinning/twirling," or to expound a bit, "twirlanders."

Contents

Gameplay

Gurumin is a 3D platform game with heavy emphasis on action through combat. Parin can acquire various headwear which have varying effects while equipped such as protection from water damage, stronger attacks or HP restoration. Each piece of headwear can be upgraded to increase their effects. Parin's drill has up to four power levels that are increased through combat or restoration points in levels and decreased by taking damage. The current level of her drill dictates damage that can be dealt and can change up and down frequently in each level. Various consumable items can be bought or found which are used during levels to restore HP or drill power.

Gurumin offers replayability by offering new difficulty levels upon completion of the game. The game starts with Beginner and Normal modes; Hard, Happy and Crazy modes are opened up with completion of the previous difficulty level. While each difficulty alters the strength of the enemies, some also change other elements of the game such as removing environmental hazards in Beginner mode, an altered game script in Happy mode (Japanese version only) and only allowing damaging of enemies through critical hits in Crazy mode.

In addition to headwear that gives characters various abilities and protection there are also a number of outfits that can be equipped. Matching the right outfit with the right hat could unlock additional abilities. These are acquired by purchase (vending machine), completing the game at a set difficulty level, or through other means such as playing on the right date when a special event happens.

Plot

A young girl named Parin goes to live with her grandfather in Tiese Town after her parents are called overseas on an excavation trip. After being told that there are no other children in Tiese, she finds what looks like another girl who is being threatened by a dog. Parin rescues the girl and discovers that she is actually a monster (お化け obake?) which only children can see. To thank Parin, the monster takes her to a crack in the back wall of the town which is revealed to be a portal to the monster world. A group of monsters known as phantoms begin a series of attacks on Monster Village. Parin, who unearths a legendary drill, decides to fight against the phantoms and restore Monster Village.

Critical reception

X-Play gave the game a four out of five.

References

Further reading

External links