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Trash Panic

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Developer
  
SIE Japan Studio

Platform
  
7.5/10
GameSpot

Initial release date
  
19 March 2009

Genre
  
Trash Panic httpsmediaplaystationcomisimageSCEAgmid1

Publisher
  
Sony Interactive Entertainment

Modes
  
Single-player video game, Multiplayer video game

Similar
  
Crash Commando, Elefunk, Linger in Shadows, Savage Moon, Numblast

Nerd plays trash panic


Trash Panic (ゴミ箱, Gomibako) is a puzzle video game for the PlayStation 3 developed by SCEJ. It was released in Japan on March 19, 2009 on the PlayStation Network download service, and has been compared to Tetris in terms of gameplay, though the object of the game is to compact items of garbage, not remove rows of blocks.

Contents

Trash Panic Trash Panic Game Giant Bomb

A spring 2009 release for both Europe and North America was announced in conjunction with an Earth Day promotion in the PlayStation Store. Though Europe was afterward given an official release date of May 28, 2009, only a preview trailer for the game was released as a part of the PlayStation Store Update for both the NA and EU regions on that date.

Trash Panic Trash Panic Game Giant Bomb

Nerd s father and son days trash panic


Gameplay

Trash Panic Trash Panic Game PS3 PlayStation

A stream of garbage is carried via conveyor belt toward a garbage can in the middle of the screen, and the object of the game is to break down the garbage by strategically placing it into the can based on the items available before the can fills to overflowing. If three pieces of undamaged garbage fall out of the trash can, the game will end. Players may process garbage by setting fire to burnable items, some garbage will decompose when placed near the correct substances, and lighter or fragile objects (a television, for example) may be smashed by heavier ones (a bowling ball). The stream of garbage will continue to drop into the trash can until either the player successfully compacts a certain quantity of items or the trash can is filled to overflowing.

Trash Panic Trash Panic PS3 Gomibako Finally Gets a US Release Technabob

Items of garbage in the game start off small, with things like pencils, pens, staplers, erasers, and other office trash. As the trash items gradually become larger (eventually becoming whole buildings, entire pieces of land, meteors, etc.), the trash can becomes larger to compensate, eventually coming to sit on top of Planet Earth itself. In addition to normal trash items, at the end of every level (in Main Dish difficulty) is a larger 'boss' item that must be compacted in ten seconds, otherwise resulting in penalty trash, consisting of impossible-to-break items released into the trash can to fill space more quickly. Every so often a special piece of trash, called mottainai (pronounced mo-teye-neye, meaning a sense or regret for waste in Japanese) will fall and must not be compacted (items which are assumed to have been thrown out by mistake, jewelry for example). Mottainai needs to be placed near the bottom of the trash can to be taken away by the NPC near the can. If the special trash is destroyed by accident, the player's Ego score will be penalized, and penalty trash will be released.

Trash Panic Trash Panic Screenshot PS3 34864 large

The scoring system is divided into two categories depending on how the player chooses to dispose of or compact their garbage to progress through the stage: Eco (Ecological) versus Ego (Egotistical). If the player groups together biodegradable items so that they decompose naturally and smashes much of their garbage into smaller, more compact pieces, their Eco rating will rise. Should the player choose to burn much of their garbage, however, their Ego rating will rise instead. The player's score does not directly affect game progress—so long as the trash is compacted sufficiently, the game will continue regardless of Ego or Eco rating—but higher overall Eco ratings will help to unlock extra levels and modes.

Main mode

Trash Panic Trash Panic Game Giant Bomb

The player will progress through a series of six stages. Three versions, ranging in difficulty from Sweets (easy), Main Dish (medium), and Hellish (hard, must be unlocked) can be chosen to play.

Unlimited mode

The player will attempt to compact garbage for as long as possible until their trash can finally overflows.

Versus mode

Two players may battle one another in a splitscreen version of the game.

Mission mode

The player must fulfill a variety of "waste management" missions.

Online features

Trash Panic Trash Panic Wikipedia

Online leaderboards and trophy support will be available for both single player and multiplayer high scores via the PlayStation Network. In addition, players will also have the option to upload up to 10 minutes of a gaming session to YouTube.

References

Trash Panic Wikipedia


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