Buster Bros.
Description official description
Pang is a platform game which consists of 50 levels in total. It can be played with one or two players on the same screen, and the other player can join anytime within the game.
Your goal is to destroy the balloons which bounce around the playfield. To accomplish this, you can shoot hooks which travel upwards, and blow up any balloon they touch. Depending on their size, they either split on two smaller ones, or evaporate if they're at their minimum size. Apart from balloons, some levels also have barriers that have to be destroyed with your hooks, since they often block your access to balloons. There are also some barriers which cannot ever be destroyed. Your character has the ability to climb ladders, but cannot jump.
You can also pick up power-ups such as: the ability to fire two shots at once, the hook that attaches to the ceiling and waits 'til something bumps into it, a gun which has a high rate of fire but cannot destroy barriers. Beside extra weapons, you can also pick certain things like clock (halting time for a small period), dynamite (reducing all balls to minimum size, thus making you able to reach more points), life, and such.
Spellings
- ポンピングワールド - Japanese spelling
Groups +
Screenshots
Promos
Credits (Arcade version)
15 People (7 developers, 8 thanks)
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Reviews
Critics
Average score: 82% (based on 31 ratings)
Players
Average score: 3.7 out of 5 (based on 56 ratings with 1 reviews)
We're forever bursting bubbles
The Good
Pang is an addictive arcade game where you control someone who looks like a tour guide as you go around 17 continents (areas) and use your grappling hook to burst several bubbles of different sizes that have mysteriously turned up everywhere. To do this, you have to keep bursting them until they are at their minimum size, and then once more to make them evaporate. I would rather pop the bubbles at their minimize size, since they are easy to get under and destroy.
There are some spectacular backdrops that look like they have been ripped straight from the coin-op version of the game. The areas are split into three stages each (with the exception of the last area, and each stage has the same backdrop. However, each stage is set in morning, in the afternoon, and at night. The backdrops look spectacular at night because most of them feature lit skyscrapers that basically look amazing.
Once you have cleared each stage of bubbles, you get to see an animation of your tour guide – which looks a Japanese warrior - doing something while the game awards you with bonuses. I enjoyed watching some of these animations because they are so well designed. Besides, it is nice to watch something other than end-of-level statistics.
At the start of each stage, you see this world map and your plane flying from one continent to the next. There is a hint below the map, which is worth reading as it tells you about new challenges coming up, and it allows you to work out the best strategy on dealing with these challenges.
There are some useful power-ups that you can get from popping some of the big bubbles, and the ones that I found useful are the time freeze and the double-shot pistol. I also like the dynamite which turns bubbles to the minimize size. Bubbles this size are a lot easier to deal with than bigger ones that often come into contact with obstacles. Ten seconds is what you get for collecting the time freeze but that's plenty of time to destroy most of the bubbles on screen.
The music is easy to listen to while you go about bursting bubbles, and I enjoyed the sound effects when you lose a life. The bubbles make this popping sound like what they should sound like.
I read on many review sites that Pang is best played with a friend. It would have been good if I had someone to help me. It would help me deal with the bubbles that are on (or coming over to) my side of the screen while they deal with those over on their side. The stage would also be finished quickly. I have no idea whether the animations would feature the other character apart from the man one.
Controls are simple to get used to. Moving the joystick left or right moves your character in either direction, while pushing it up allows you to climb ladders. Pressing the fire button allows you to fire your hook or double-shot pistol.
The Bad
I didn't like the fact that there is a time limit in which you have to finish a level before it expires. I am always waiting for the right moment to burst the bubbles that approach me. Lucky there is a certain power-up that increases the time.
The Bottom Line
The game has you bursting a series of bubbles within a time limit, and getting the power-ups that are dropped to help you finish the task quickly. The continents you visit are beautiful, and their transition from day to night reflects which of the three stages that you are on. Animations, controls, and sound are good, too. If you feel the need to burst bubbles other than from inside your mouth, then Pang is the game for you.
Pang was a huge success that numerous sequels followed. The home computer versions of these never saw the light of day. This game is also known as Buster Bros., which is a much better word to describe what you are doing in the game. Also don't ask me way, but the Japanese title is Pomping World, which sounds pretty disgusting.
Amiga · by Katakis | カタキス (43087) · 2009
Discussion
Subject | By | Date |
---|---|---|
Buster Bros. was released in Nov. of '89(Wikipedia) | Andrew Fisher (699) | Aug 28, 2022 |
Trivia
Mistakes
Amstrad CPC:
Three locations have (for an unknown reason) the background image taken from three other locations:
Mt. Fuji - image taken from "Kenya" location (Mt. Kilimanjaro).
"Australia" - image taken from Mt. Keirin location.
"Paris" - image taken from "Barcelona" location (church Sagrada Família).
Commodore 64:
"Mt. Keirin" is misspelled as "Mt. Kieren" and "Leningrad" is misspelled as "Lenningrad".
ZX Spectrum:
Australia is misspelled as "Autralia".
1001 Video Games
Pang appears in the book 1001 Video Games You Must Play Before You Die by General Editor Tony Mott.
Cancelled NES version
A NES version was advertised but never materialized.
Inspiration
The game's basic idea of shooting balloons to split them into smaller ones came from a 1983 title (also by Hudson Soft) called Bubble Buster. As far as I know, the game only appeared on the Sinclair Spectrum system, marketed by Sinclair themselves.
Awards
- Amiga Power
- May 1991 (Issue #00) - #11 in the "All Time Top 100 Amiga Games"
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Identifiers +
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Contributors to this Entry
Game added by MAT.
Commodore 64 added by Quapil. Atari ST, ZX Spectrum, Amstrad CPC added by Martin Smith. Game Boy added by festershinetop. Arcade added by Pseudo_Intellectual. TurboGrafx CD added by Unicorn Lynx.
Additional contributors: B.L. Stryker, Shoddyan, Alaka, Martin Smith, Freeman, formercontrib, MichaelPalin, Jo ST, FatherJack.
Game added October 15, 2001. Last modified September 3, 2024.