Rahul Sharma (Editor)

Gon (video game)

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Initial release date
  
11 November 1994

Mode
  
Single-player video game

Developer
  
Gon (video game) httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediaenthumb8

Genre(s)
  
Side-scrolling action platformer

Platform
  
Super Nintendo Entertainment System

Publishers
  
Bandai Namco Entertainment, Bandai

Similar
  
Tekken Force, Tekken Card Challenge, Tekken Advance, Tekken 3, Death by Degrees

Gon (ゴン) is a Japan-exclusive side-scrolling action video game with platforming elements for the Super Famicom published by Bandai. The game is an adaptation of the manga series Gon by Masashi Tanaka, about the daily life of a super-deformed orange carnosaur named Gon.

Contents

Plot and Presentation

Like the manga, the game features a minimal plot and no dialogue. It advances the story using comics-style cutscenes with a focus on comic situations Gon gets himself into searching for food, interacting with other animals, or venturing into different ecosystems that made up the prehistoric world.

Gameplay

Enemies include monkeys, warthogs, polar bears, rhinoceroses, ibex, and bobcats. Sharks and orcas have the special ability to swallow Gon whole, but he can break free in most instances. There are Mode 7 chase sequences between levels, in which Gon must avoid obstacles while catching up to a monkey. The player's score is only seen at the end of each level.

Gon has three attacks: a basic self-defense biting attack, a whip of his tail, and a headbutt. Gon is given three continues until the whole planet is destroyed leading to a game over screen. The game lacks a HUD-style health bar. Instead, the music gets faster until Gon dies from his injuries. Sound effects have a musical quality and vice versa.

Legacy

Gon would later go on to play a role in the Sony PlayStation fighting game Tekken 3 in 1998. A new platform game, Gon: Baku Baku Baku Baku Adventure, developed for the Nintendo 3DS, was released in Japan on June 14, 2012 by Namco Bandai Games.

References

Gon (video game) Wikipedia