Columns (video game) explained

Columns
Developer:Sega
Publisher:Sega
Designer:Jay Geertsen
Composer:Tokuhiko Uwabo
Genre:Puzzle
Modes:Single-player, multiplayer
Arcade System:Sega System C

is a match-three puzzle video game released by Jay Geertsen in 1989. Designed for the Motorola 68000-based HP 9000 running HP-UX,[1] [2] it was ported to Mac and MS-DOS before being released commercially by Sega who ported it to arcades and then to several Sega consoles. The game was subsequently ported to other home computers, including the Atari ST.

Gameplay

Columns was one of the many tile-matching puzzle games to appear after the great success of Tetris in the late 1980s.[3] The game itself is enclosed within a tall, rectangular playing area. Columns of three different symbols (such as differently-colored jewels) appear, one at a time, at the top of the well and fall to the bottom, landing either on the floor or on top of previously fallen "columns". While a column is falling, the player can move it left and right, and can also cycle the positions of the symbols within it. After a column lands, if three or more of the same symbols are connected in a horizontal, vertical, or diagonal line, those symbols disappear. The pile of columns then settles under gravity. If this resettlement causes three or more other symbols to align, they too disappear and the cycle repeats. Occasionally, a special column with a multicolor Magic Jewel appears. It destroys all the jewels with the same color as the one underneath it. The columns fall at a faster rate as the player progresses. The goal of the game is to play for as long as possible before the well fills up with jewels, which ends the game. Players can score up to 99,999,999 points.[4]

Some ports of the game offer alternate game modes as well. "Flash columns" involves mining their way through a set number of lines to get to a flashing jewel at the bottom. "Doubles" allows two players work together in the same well. "Time trial" involves racking up as many points as possible within the time limit.

Ports

Sega ported the arcade game to the Mega Drive/Genesis console. This version of the game was nearly identical to the original arcade game.[5]

Columns was the first pack-in game for the Game Gear. This version was slightly different from the Mega Drive/Genesis version and its soundtrack was transposed and rearranged due to limitations of the handheld's sound chip. While the columns themselves were updated for the Mega Drive/Genesis version, the overall decoration was less like a cartoon in the Game Gear version and instead more artistically designed. Lastly, the Game Gear version had a feature that let the player change the jewels to fruit, squares, dice, or playing card suits (clubs, diamonds, spades, and hearts).

In 1990, Compile and Telenet Japan developed and published an MSX2 version.

In November 2006, Columns was released as part of the game Sega Genesis Collection for the PlayStation 2, and later on another release of the above compilation for PlayStation Portable. The same year on December 4, title was released on Nintendo's Virtual Console for 800 Wii Points. It is also included on Sonic's Ultimate Genesis Collection for the PlayStation 3 and Xbox 360.[6] It was included as one of the games in the Sega Genesis Mini. It was also included as one of the games in the 2018 releases of Sega Genesis Classics for Windows, Linux, macOS, PlayStation 4, Xbox One, and Nintendo Switch. Most recently the game was ported to iOS by Sega, but the port was subsequently withdrawn by Sega.[7] The game was re-released on the Nintendo Switch Online + Expansion Pack in December 2022.

Music

Tokuhiko Uwabo composed the music for Columns. The songs "Clotho", "Atropos"[8] and "Lathesis" (sic[9]) are named after the Moirai from Greek mythology, related to the Greek flavor of some of the game's art.

Reception

In Japan, Game Machine listed Columns on their April 15, 1990 issue as being the eighth most-successful table arcade unit of the month.[10] It went on to be Japan's fourth highest-grossing arcade game of 1990 (below Capcom's Final Fight and Sega's Tetris and Super Monaco GP)[11] and third highest-grossing arcade conversion kit of 1991 (below Capcom's Street Fighter II and Sega's Tetris).[12]

Reviewing the game's appearance in Sega Arcade Classics for the Sega CD, Glenn Rubenstein gave it a B+ rating in Wizard magazine, describing it as "like Tetris but a bit better".[13] Mega placed the game at number 34 in their "Top Mega Drive Games of All Time".[14] In 2017, Gamesradar ranked the game 40th on its "Best Sega Genesis/Mega Drive games of all time".[15]

Legacy

Many sequels and spin-offs were produced: Columns II: The Voyage Through Time, Columns III: Revenge of Columns, Columns '97, 1 & 2, and many compilations and re-releases (Columns Arcade Collection, Sega Ages Vol. 07: Columns) as well. Because Columns was made by Sega, versions were made available on the Master System, Mega Drive/Genesis, Sega CD, Game Gear, Saturn, and Dreamcast. Additional versions of the game have also been made available on PC-Engine, Game Boy Advance, and PlayStation 2. A Super Famicom version was released in Japan via the Nintendo Power service.[16] The Game Boy Color version was specifically called Columns GB: Osamu Tezuka Characters, where it featured many of his characters such as Kimba and Astroboy, but also featured slightly less known characters such as Unico.

Columns has also been cloned many times across different platforms:

Title Platform Release date Developer Publisher Notes
Coloris 1990 Signum Victoriae Avesoft
Magic Jewelry RCM Group The title is the best known of all its clones, and was released on unlicensed Famicom multicarts.
Columns 1991 Piter Ltd. Piter Ltd.
Magic Jewelry II RCM Group With the addition of new features, it is the sequel to Magic Jewelry.
Jewelbox 1992 Rodney and Brenda Jacks Varcon Systems
Xixit 1995 Optik Software
Yahoo! Towers 1999/2000 Yahoo! Games This clone allows up to eight players to compete against each other.
BREF Columns 2013 Mumblecore Mumblecore
Magic Jewelry 3 2015 Guolin Ou Guolin Ou A magic column appears when a level is cleared, with which a player can clear all the jewels in same color.
Molums 2018 Antonelli Francisco Wisefox

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Columns for HP-UX (1989) First Ever Release, Before Sega Bought The Rights. YouTube.
  2. Web site: The Original Version of Columns for the HP-UX Has Just Been Found. Time Extension. Gamer Network.
  3. The Maturation of Computer Entertainment: Warming The Global Village. Computer Gaming World. 1990-07-08. 16 November 2013. 11.
  4. Web site: Highest points total on Columns (Mega Drive version). Guinness World Records. 2020-02-06.
  5. News: Barnes . Adam . The Making Of: Columns . 5 July 2021 . . . 11 July 2019.
  6. Web site: Wii Virtual Console Lineup Unveiled . 2006-11-01. Parish. Jeremy. 2006-10-31. 1UP.com.
  7. Web site: Sega pulls more than a dozen games from iTunes App Store, Google Play. Polygon. 2015-05-18. 2021-07-04.
  8. Web site: Search: columns atropos. YouTube.
  9. Web site: Search: columns lathesis . YouTube.
  10. Game Machine's Best Hit Games 25 - テーブル型TVゲーム機 (Table Videos). Game Machine. 378. Amusement Press, Inc.. 15 April 1990. 25. ja.
  11. 第4回ゲーメスト大賞 〜 インカム部門ベスト10 . 4th Gamest Awards – Income Category: Best 10 . . December 27, 1990 . 54 (February 1991) . 6–24 (24) . ja. alternate url
  12. "Final Fight II" and "Final Lap 2" Top Videos: Video Games of The Year '91 . . 419 . . 1 February 1992 . 26 . ja .
  13. Rubenstein. Glenn. January 1993. At the Controls. Wizard. 17. 21–24. Wizard Entertainment.
  14. Mega magazine issue 1, page 76, Future Publishing, Oct 1992
  15. Web site: GamesRadar Staff. 2017-06-21. Best Sega Genesis/Mega Drive games of all time. 2022-02-21. gamesradar.
  16. Web site: Archived copy . 2004-04-06 . https://web.archive.org/web/20040406031312/http://www.nintendo.co.jp/n03/sf/npnew/pdf/bclj.pdf . 2004-04-06 . live.