Katamari Damacy

Moby ID: 14970
PlayStation 2 Specs
Note: We may earn an affiliate commission on purchases made via eBay or Amazon links (prices updated 4/15 7:08 AM )
See Also

Description official descriptions

The King of All Cosmos accidentally destroyed the stars and—having recovered—wants the prince to rebuild them. Unfortunately the prince stands a little less than half a foot tall, so recreating the stars will require some effort. Enter the Katamari, a sphere the prince can push around our world to “roll up” items increasing the Katamari’s size until it’s suitable for the King.

Taking place in stylized versions of Japanese houses, cities, and environs, the prince pushes the Katamari around collecting items which adhere to it. At first, the prince can only pick up smaller items, but as the Katamari grows, the more it can collect. Push pins and paper clips cling to the Katamari increasing its size so it can roll over obstacles and pick up bigger items. Over many levels, the Katamari can eventually pick up people, cars, and other bigger items.

Players steer the Katamari from a third-person perspective using the analog sticks on the PS2. A tutorial stage takes the player through the controls and sets up the story as well as introducing a side story about a Japanese girl who can feel the cosmos. Wanting to challenge the prince, the King sets requirements on the Katamari’s size and sets time limits on the level. Bonus missions restore constellations and have their own restrictions.

The world of Katamari Damacy is brought to life with off-beat animation and a catchy soundtrack. Players can find presents hidden in the levels that contain accessories for the prince. Two players can also battle head-to-head in a Katamari competition.

Spellings

  • 块魂 - Simplified Chinese spelling
  • 塊魂 - Japanese spelling

Groups +

Screenshots

Promos

Videos

See any errors or missing info for this game?

You can submit a correction, contribute trivia, add to a game group, add a related site or alternate title.

Credits (PlayStation 2 version)

200 People (117 developers, 83 thanks) · View all

Producer
Localization Producer (Namco LTD.)
Localization Specialists (Namco LTD.)
Project Supervisor
Product Marketing Manager
Marketing Specialist
Public Relations Manager
Senior Quality Assurance Manager
Quality Assurance Lead
Quality Assurance Testers
[ full credits ]

Reviews

Critics

Average score: 89% (based on 27 ratings)

Players

Average score: 4.0 out of 5 (based on 90 ratings with 5 reviews)

Gleeful Insanity.

The Good
It's been a long time since a new twitch game so simple, yet maddeningly addicting has come along. Then this title quietly pops out of nowhere, and it's utterly brilliant.

The opening cinematic of this game only leaves you scratching your head in confused wonderment at the flying animals, flashing colors and rainbows that seemingly have nothing to do with anything. The story leaves you just as puzzled as your snotty father berates you for his own mistake. And then....

And then the game begins.

It starts out so simple. Pick up a few household items. As levels progress, you pick up larger things. Then animals. Then people, cars, buildings, stadiums, rainbows, octopus, mountains.... all to make stars. And the controls are so simple, it just becomes more fun to roll up anything you can fit onto your katamari. The game is delightfully addictive, and using both analog sticks is definitely intuitive.

The graphics and music are catchy and fun. Hearing people scream as you roll them into your ball becomes a sadistic delight. The game is never really violent. It treats the chaos with a very playful and light-hearted attitude.

At $20, there is no reason for a hard-core gamer not to add this to their collection.

The Bad
Multi-player is something I hope they build upon more in the sequel. I can fault the gameplay. It's spot-on, but there's nothing worse than running out of time when you're just SO close to building that star.

And hopefully, the next game will be longer in terms of overall playability.

The Bottom Line
There's nothing sane about Katamari Damacy. It's silly and random, and often times, makes no sense whatsoever. This is one of the few exceptions that a player will care less.

There aren't a lot of unique and original games like this that come out. As a gamer, I would like to see more innovative games like this come out than the same trends that publishers pound into our heads that we need to have every year. Namco definitely deserves a lot of credit for bringing this unusual title out.

Again, for its low price, it would be a shame to miss something this special to play. Highly recommended.

PlayStation 2 · by Guy Chapman (1748) · 2005

Every gamer who owns a PS2 simply must buy this game. It's that simple.

The Good
The gameplay premise is so preposterous that you'd think I was on LSD if I told you that the object of the game is to wad stuff up into a giant ball. That's it! Wad everything you can find in the gameworld up into a giant freakin' ball! It sounds goofy, and it is, but it is simultaneously one of the most addictive and fun games that I have ever played in my 25+ years of electronic gaming.

The gameplay is whack: You use both PS2 dual-shock analog sticks to control your katamari across one of several game worlds, rolling over things to pick them up and add them to your wad. And I do mean picking up anything and everything you can find: gum, nails, ants, etc. As the wad gets larger, you can pick up larger things such as cats, dogs, people, bicycles, chairs, etc. Finally you can get so big that you're wadding up entire buildings, tankers, giant sea monsters... It's freakin' nuts!

If that alone were it, Katamari Damacy (pronounced kah-tah-mar-ee dah-mah-she, loosely translated as "clump of souls") would be a great game. But it transcends greatness into an instant classic because of the soundtrack. The soundtrack... each and every song (with exactly one lounge-singing exception) is sweet, perfect, appropriate, and uniquely Japanese cool. Each track is so good that I find myself listening to them outside of the game all the time.

And after it's all said and done and you've had the time of your life, the more technical programmers out there will realize how clever the game engine is, as it convincingly portrays a game world that lets you pick up tens of thousands of objects while hiding the background processes that make it possible.

The Bad
The multiplayer mode doesn't have options to expand the time limit or choose different arenas. The multiplayer mode is fun, don't get me wrong, but without those kinds of options, it gets stale after 3 or 4 matches.

The Bottom Line
At a price of $20, every single PS2 owner should be ashamed to not own this game. Please support wacky Japanese technology. Seriously. It is so rare that an original gameplay concept is brought to market -- moreso, that is actually FUN -- that we all owe it to ourselves to buy this game and support the concept.

PlayStation 2 · by Trixter (8952) · 2023

An incredible game that's too short, but still worth every penny!

The Good
What's not to like about this game? The graphics, while being rather simplistically modeled, still convey your surroundings beautifully. All of the music is energetic and catchy. You'll be humming a few of these tunes in the car on your way to work. The controls may take a few minutes to get used to, but you'll soon be rolling like a pro. The gameplay itself is extremely simple; you'll pick up everything you need to know in a matter of minutes, but that doesn't stop this from being one of the most intriguing and addicting games out there.

The Bad
If there's one flaw about the game that has to be brought up, it's the fact that it's just too darned short! Not short as in you can finish it in a week, or short as in you can finish it in a couple of days... no, this game is short as in you can probably finish it in two or three hours. Luckily, even after you finish the game (which has an extremely satisfying ending no spoilers), you can go back and try to collect items which you've missed or unlock special modes, or just retry levels to make a bigger ball!

The Bottom Line
Katamari Damacy is a unique, fun and addicting action game the likes of which you've never seen before.

PlayStation 2 · by Lucefin (1427) · 2004

[ View all 5 player reviews ]

Trivia

1001 Video Games

Katamari Damacy appears in the book 1001 Video Games You Must Play Before You Die by General Editor Tony Mott.

Title translation

Katamari Damacy is pronounced "Kah-tah-mah-ree Dah-mah-she." It roughly translates to "Clump of Souls" in English.

Awards

  • Electronic Gaming Monthly
    • February 2006 (Issue #200) - #172 out of 200 on the "Greatest Games of Their Time" list
  • GameSpy
    • 2004 – #10 Game of the Year
    • 2004 – #3 PS2 Game of the Year

Information also contributed by Big John WV.

Analytics

MobyPro Early Access

Upgrade to MobyPro to view research rankings!

Related Games

Korogashi Puzzle Katamari Damacy
Released 2009 on Nintendo DSi
Katamari Damacy: Reroll
Released 2018 on Windows, 2020 on PlayStation 4, Windows Apps...
i Love Katamari
Released 2008 on iPhone, 2011 on Windows Phone, 2013 on Android
Me & My Katamari
Released 2005 on PSP
Amazing Katamari Damacy
Released 2017 on Android, iPhone, iPad
We ♥ Katamari
Released 2005 on PlayStation 2
Planet Cube: Edge
Released 2023 on Xbox Series, Xbox One, PlayStation 5...
PixARK
Released 2018 on Windows, PlayStation 4, Nintendo Switch
We ♥ Katamari: Reroll+ Royal Reverie - Katamari Damacy Series Music Bundle
Released 2023 on Xbox One, PlayStation 5, Xbox Series...

Related Sites +

Identifiers +

  • MobyGames ID: 14970
  • [ Please login / register to view all identifiers ]

Contribute

Are you familiar with this game? Help document and preserve this entry in video game history! If your contribution is approved, you will earn points and be credited as a contributor.

Contributors to this Entry

Game added by Lucefin.

PlayStation 3 added by Charly2.0.

Additional contributors: Terrence Bosky, Unicorn Lynx, Namaenashi, DreinIX, Patrick Bregger, FatherJack.

Game added September 27, 2004. Last modified August 16, 2023.