Neha Patil (Editor)

Gorby no Pipeline Daisakusen

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Initial release date
  
12 April 1991

Publisher
  
Developer
  
Compile

Genre
  
Puzzle video game

Gorby no Pipeline Daisakusen Gorby no Pipeline Daisakusen User Screenshot 1 for MSX GameFAQs

Platforms
  
Nintendo Entertainment System, MSX, FM Towns

Similar
  
Tokuma Shoten games, Puzzle video games

A look at gorby no pipeline daisakusen nes gaijin guide


Gorby's Pipeline Plan (Japanese: ゴルビーのパイプライン大作戦, Hepburn: Gorubī no Paipurain Daisakusen) is a puzzle video game developed by Compile for the MSX2, Famicom, and FM Towns. It was published by Tokuma Shoten in 1991.

Contents

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With permission of the Soviet embassy, the game and its promotional materials feature the name and likeness of Mikhail Gorbachev, who was President of the Soviet Union at the time of the game's development and release.

Gorby no Pipeline Daisakusen Gorby no Pipeline Daisakusen Wikipedia

In the game, the player assembles water pipe segments for a pipeline from Moscow to Tokyo in order to strengthen Japan–Soviet Union relations.

Gorby no Pipeline Daisakusen A look at Gorby no Pipeline Daisakusen NES Gaijin Guide YouTube

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Gameplay

Gorby no Pipeline Daisakusen Gorby no Pipeline Daisakusen Japan ROM lt NES ROMs Emuparadise

In this falling-block puzzle game, a small girl—wearing a Russian national costume of sarafan, kokoshnik, and valenki—pushes tiles representing segments of water pipe down a two-dimensional, vertical shaft; this shaft is the field of play. A second girl, also in national costume, waves semaphore flags to give the impression that she guides the placement of the tiles.

The player must quickly rotate and place the tiles to catch and conduct a continuously-flowing stream of water from pipes on one side of the shaft to the other. When the player successfully links an inflow pipe on one side of the shaft to an outflow pipe on the other side, a row of tiles disappears, and the player earns points. If the player routes the water to a dead end, the game adds a layer of pipe segments for the player to clear. If the accumulating pipe segments stack to the top of the shaft, the game ends. By clearing the requisite number of rows, the player proceeds to the next game level.

Music

The background music for each level is a rendition of a Russian classical music composition. Among the selections are "The Great Gate of Kiev", the final movement from Mussorgsky's suite Pictures at an Exhibition (1874); "Swan's Theme" from Tchaikovsky's ballet Swan Lake (1876); and "Flight of the Bumblebee", an interlude from Rimsky-Korsakov's opera The Tale of Tsar Saltan (1900).

References

Gorby no Pipeline Daisakusen Wikipedia