Puyo Puyo~n cover

Puyo Puyo Series

Puyo Puyo~n

Puzzle Fantasy Comedy Kids
58
User Score
5 ratings
March 4, 1999
Released 9915 days ago
PlayStation 3 Nintendo 64 PlayStation PlayStation Portable Dreamcast

About

This game was released only in Japan. It is the fourth game in the Puyo Puyo series and the last set during the Madou-era in the main series.
Continuing the trend of naming the games after puns, the name comes from a pun on "yon", the Japanese word for the number 4, but this time this is the only reference to the pun.

The gameplay in is similar to that of Puyo Puyo 2, but adds super attacks. Clearing chains now builds up a "charge meter" which allows players to use them. The only other addition was a new game mode which could be played with a number of different field sizes, smaller or bigger than the standard 6x12, however, it removes several game modes that were present in Puyo Puyo Sun, i.e. the tournament, task and chain training modes. The art is also vastly different to the previous game in the series and, of course, the Fever series; this style was only otherwise used for Minna de Puyo Puyo.

Storyline

With the advent of the Puyo Puyo Circus, Arle and Carbuncle have come to visit and take part in festivities. Arle makes her way to one of the tents to watch a show, led by Satan as the ringmaster. As part of one of the acts, Satan requests a volunteer to come down to the stage. With Carbuncle as said volunteer, he performed a disappearing act, making him vanish before the crowd. After Arle leaves the tent after the show has concluded, she realizes Carbuncle is nowhere to be found. Thus, Arle begins to explore the circus grounds in search of her friend.

Puyo Puyo~n features a Beginner and Normal course. The Beginner course features the first three stages and does not play cutscenes. Arle cannot use her personal Super attack in story mode, but can call upon the powers of Draco Centauros, Serilly, Witch, and Chico as the player advances. Unlike previous Puyo Puyo story modes, the gameplay rules drastically change between stages.

Due to the length of the Story Mode compared to other Puyo Puyo games, the game saves after every stage. This allows the player to quit and then start back on their current stage without losing progress.

Screenshots

Videos

Gameplay Video

Release Dates by Platform

Dreamcast Worldwide
Mar 4, 1999
Nintendo 64 Worldwide
Dec 3, 1999
PlayStation Worldwide
Dec 16, 1999
PlayStation 3 Worldwide
Oct 25, 2017
PlayStation Portable Worldwide
Oct 25, 2017

Game Info

Developer
Compile
Publisher
Sega, Compile
Game Modes
Single player, Split screen
Perspective
Side view
Genres
Puzzle
Themes
Fantasy Comedy Kids

Languages

Audio / Voice
Japanese
Text / Subtitles
Japanese

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