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  • TwinBee 3: Poko Poko Daimaō
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  • Twinbee 3 is a vertical-scrolling shoot-'em-up video game produced by Konami released for the NES. It was the third game in the TwinBee NES series, following the home version of the original TwinBee and the Famicom-exclusive Moero TwinBee. Unlike Moero, which was released in North America as Stinger, TwinBee 3 was a Japan-only release. The game uses digitized PCM voice samples, particularly when the conga music in one stage chants "Poko Poko", and in the beginning of each stage, in which a voice proclaims the name of the stage.
  • TwinBee 3: Poko Poko Daimaō (ツインビー3 ポコポコ大魔王Tsuinbī Surī?, "The Great Demon King Poko Poko") is a vertical-scrolling shoot 'em up video game produced by Konami originally released for the Family Computer in 1989. It was the third game in the TwinBee series released for the Famicom, following the home version of the original TwinBeeand the Famicom-exclusiveMoero TwinBee. Unlike Moero, which was released in North America as Stinger, TwinBee 3was a Japan-only release. It was re-released on April 14, 2006 as part of the i-Revo downloadable game service.
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Previous
Platforms
  • NES
  • Famicom, Mobile phone
Game
  • Twinbee 3: Poko Poko Daimao
Genre
  • Shoot 'em up
ReleaseDate
  • 1989
dbkwik:shmup/property/wikiPageUsesTemplate
Title
  • TwinBee 3: Poko Poko Daimaō
Image size
  • 214
Released
  • --09-29
Developer
  • Konami
NEXT
  • None
Composer
  • Atsushi Fujio, Hidehiro Funauchi, Katsuhiko Suzuki
Publisher
  • Konami
abstract
  • TwinBee 3: Poko Poko Daimaō (ツインビー3 ポコポコ大魔王Tsuinbī Surī?, "The Great Demon King Poko Poko") is a vertical-scrolling shoot 'em up video game produced by Konami originally released for the Family Computer in 1989. It was the third game in the TwinBee series released for the Famicom, following the home version of the original TwinBeeand the Famicom-exclusiveMoero TwinBee. Unlike Moero, which was released in North America as Stinger, TwinBee 3was a Japan-only release. It was re-released on April 14, 2006 as part of the i-Revo downloadable game service. TwinBee 3 ditches the side-scrolling stages from Stinger and only features top-scrolling ones similar to the original. Moreover, the game lacks the 3-Player mode from Moero, allowing only up to two players. The game is considerably easier than its predecessors due to an option mode that allows players to adjust the difficulty and number of ships, as well as the inclusion of the new "soul reviving system", which allows players to recover their power-ups after losing a ship. The game uses digitized PCM voice samples, particularly when the conga music in one stage chants "Poko Poko", and in the beginning of each stage, in which a voice proclaims the name of the stage.
  • Twinbee 3 is a vertical-scrolling shoot-'em-up video game produced by Konami released for the NES. It was the third game in the TwinBee NES series, following the home version of the original TwinBee and the Famicom-exclusive Moero TwinBee. Unlike Moero, which was released in North America as Stinger, TwinBee 3 was a Japan-only release. TwinBee 3 ditches the side-scrolling stages from Stinger and only features top-scrolling ones similar to the original. Moreover, the game lacks the 3-Player mode from Moero, allowing only up to two players. The game is considerably easier than its predecessors due to an option mode that allows players to adjust the difficulty and number of ships, as well as the inclusion of the new "soul reviving system", which allows players to recover their power-ups after losing a ship. The game uses digitized PCM voice samples, particularly when the conga music in one stage chants "Poko Poko", and in the beginning of each stage, in which a voice proclaims the name of the stage.
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