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Chulip

Moby ID: 26767

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Critic Reviews add missing review

Average score: 58% (based on 11 ratings)

Player Reviews

Average score: 3.6 out of 5 (based on 12 ratings with 1 reviews)

Kiss people for money and health or die!..

The Good
You are taking a stroll through a quiet town at night, trying to avoid a maniacal, robotic, permanently smiling policeman who will shoot you on sight. Suddenly a teacher who looks like a midget imbued into a telegraph pole runs towards you, shouting gibberish. You decide to take a back alley and put your ear to the sewer manhole. You discover that a turtle lives underground, dreaming of naked people. But you have no time, because you need to assemble four dictionaries in order to kiss an alien. You barely escape a crazy purple dragon who has occupied a children's playground with a map of Japanese railway encrypted in the sand. You decide to head home for now, and on the way try to kiss a girl you are in love with, but get slapped and lose five hit points. Oh, well. Diving into a trash can, you console yourself with a potato, then open the door to your house, greet your father, and go to the toilet to save your game and end your day in Chulip.

The above paragraph can only give you a shadow of an idea of the incorporated weirdness that is Chulip. However, though this game must have appeared foreign and bizarrely unique to Western audiences, in Japan it represents a venerable tradition of strange, yet artistically inspired adventure games with very unusual RPG elements, all going back to the seminal game Moon. As far as I know, the only game in this style that was released in the West besides Chulip is Chibi-Robo.

Like other Moon-inspired games, Chulip is essentially a puzzle-solving adventure with a RPG angle, which is truly unlike anything you have ever seen. In Moon you saved the souls of monsters defeated by a virtual RPG hero, and gathered "love points" instead of experience; in Chulip, you level up by kissing. Yes, that's right, kissing. There is no combat in the game, but money and sufficient amounts of health are needed to solve the main quest, and these can be increased almost exclusively by kissing the residents of the wackiest, most grotesque town ever conceived for a video game.

But don't think that all you need to do is just walk up to a person and kiss him or her. Inhabitants have their own preferences, which are anything but easy to discover, and you'll have to work very hard to find the right approach. Sometimes you just need to be in the right place at the right time; but more often than not, you'll have to collect items, bits of information, and closely follow the schedule of a character to land a successful kiss. There is a fully functioning internal clock in the game; characters have detailed, elaborate schedules, the scenery changes all the time, and the town, despite the somewhat minimalistic graphics, feels vibrant and alive.

Walking around the town, collecting strange items, learning everything possible about everyone, listening to latest rumors, and trying to solve the mind-boggling kissing tasks can become quite a fascinating experience. The game is consistently bizarre and refreshingly different from anything else out there; everything in it seems to serve the same purpose: be weird. From the edgy, jazzy music to the impossible character design (everyone is widely disproportional at best, and in many cases only marginally human), hilarious, nearly hysterical "gibberish" voice acting and logic-defying puzzles - every single design element rejects tradition and conventions, and challenges the player in different ways.

The Bad
The graphics may turn off some people because of their very "old school" appearance. It would have been nice to have more advanced 3D and a rotatable camera. Also, while the characters are charming in their "blockiness", the backgrounds are for the most part fairly bland.

The game's big problem becomes evident when its own wackiness turns against itself. The designers showed much inspiration creating the game world, its inhabitants, and the original premise, but they didn't stop there: apparently, they decided that lack of logic and weirdness always equals fun, no matter how ill-conceived they may be when applied to gameplay. As a result, their imagination traveled way too far, turning the simplest tasks in the game into torturous exercises in clueless frustration.

Much of the gameplay in Chulip consists of solving the main quest in an adventure-like fashion, by taking to people and gathering clues; in addition, you'll have to kiss as many people as possible to gain the much-needed money and extra health. However, in many cases it is next to impossible to figure out what needs to be done in order to make a person agree to kiss you. Most of the solutions stubbornly oppose anything resembling logic and can be figured out solely through trial-and-error, made even more aggravating due to the game's strict time constraints. Time passes very quickly, and since most inhabitants can be encountered only during a few select hours, you will find yourself constantly hurrying, being late, and having to wait another day.

To be fair, it's not as bad as in Endnesia. The publishers of the US version included a walkthrough of sorts in the game packaging. Unfortunately, it is more than likely than you'll need to consult this walkthrough many times to put an end to aimless wandering and frustrating attempts to do something constructive in the game. Obtuse puzzle design has ruined many adventure games, including Chulip.

The Bottom Line
Chulip is too quirky, too crazy, too unique to ignore, and bathing in its sheer unstoppable wackiness can be almost perversely pleasurable. But its wild creativity does not really make up for its gameplay-related idiosyncrasies. Dying from dumpster poo or amorous rejections would have been acceptable if the game were a solid, cleverly built adventure - which, unfortunately, it is not.

PlayStation 2 · by Unicorn Lynx (181775) · 2015

Contributors to this Entry

Critic reviews added by nyccrg, Rellni944, Alaka, DreinIX, Jacob Gens.