• Categories • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • Archives • (1) • (2) • (9) • (1) • (1) • (1) • (2) • (1) • (1) • (1) • (4) • (4) • (1) • (3) • (2) • (5) • (2) • (1) • (1) • (2) • (1) • (3) • (7) • (1) • (1) • (8) • (12) • (2) • (4) • (2) • (1) • (1) • (3) • (1) • (5) • (1) • (1) • (3) • (2) • (2) • (1) • (3) • (1) • (5) • (15). Today, I’ve got something else obscure to look at: Bishōjo Senshi Sailor Moon S: Quiz Taiketsu! Sailor Power Kesshū!! (original title: 美少女戦士セーラームーン S – クイズ対決! セーラーパワー結集!!), a Sailor Moon quiz game for the Bandai Playdia. Once again quoting: Tsukino Usagi and her friends, the Sailor Senshi, are attending a lecture by a picture book author, Misaki Asako, when a Daimon called Quiz appears to steal Asako’s pure heart crystal.

There is one stage for each of the five Sailor Senshi (Sailor Moon, Sailor Mercury, Sailor Venus, Sailor Mars, and Sailor Jupiter), which may be played in any order. In each stage, the player must answer a series of twenty multiple-choice questions, testing his or her knowledge of the Sailor Moon anime, which represents a battle against a sub-boss. Upon successfully completing a stage by answering at least 16 questions correctly, the sub-boss is defeated, and the player receives a password, after which another stage may be selected. Upon receiving all five passwords, the player may restart the game and enter the passwords, unlocking the final stage, in which the five Sailor Senshi are joined by Sailor Uranus and Sailor Neptune for a final twenty question quiz. Throughout the game, there are clips of animation in the style of the anime.

Upon completing the game, a karaoke version of the anime’s opening theme is played over clips from the game. “” by – Own work. Licensed under via. A few words about the Playdia itself would not be amiss, I think. It was a CD-based console, released in Japan in 1994, reminiscent of the (similarly doomed) CD-i. Most of the console’s library (, which has a list) was quiz or edutainment software, and much of it seems to be licensed titles based on anime.

Indian railway station announcement ringtone download. Download Bandai Playdia ROMs and Games for PC,iOS or Android Phone. Now listing roms for bandai playdia. Showing 50 roms at index 0 of 126 @ Dope Roms.

Bandai playdia emulator download

The first three games (), released on 1994-09-23, were based on Dragonball Z, Sailor Moon S, and SD Gundam. The Playdia currently has no emulator available, so the only way to play these games is to buy the console.

It looks like they’re around $150 on eBay, and this particular game will set you back a further $50, so I don’t recommend it. I based my description on a scan of the manual and a video playthrough, both provided.

They are also the source of the screenshots in this post. Opening movie The game opens with a brief animated movie setting up the plot. I’ll not recapitulate that here–you can read the description above. The quality of the animation is quite on par with the TV anime.

It is perhaps a little more static than the anime, but it’s well drawn and the video output by the game is of good quality. The first thing the the player must do is decide whether to begin at the beginning of the game, or to enter a password and skip the first five stages, going straight to the final quiz. This is, I suppose, because the Playdia doesn’t appear to support any kind of saved games. Passwords are the only option. The password is in the form of five pictures which the game reveals, one after each successfully-completed stage. The player can choose the order in which to take on the first five stages, but all five must be completed before proceeding to the final stage. Unless, of course, the password has been gotten some other way.

The game itself is simply a series of multiple-choice trivia questions. There are twenty per stage, and six stages (counting the final stage), making 120 questions per complete playthrough. The back cover of the game boasts 300 questions, so I assume that they are randomized. Questions are generally read aloud by some character in the game. The questions on Usagi’s stage are related to the Sailor Moon anime. The question above, “「つきにかわて、おしおきよ」は、だれのせりふ?” (“In the name of the Moon, I will punish you” is whose line?), is very simple, but they do get progressively harder.