Bubble Bobble (1986)

Taito

Arcade

3.65 from 745 ratings

1519 members have it in their collection · 17 playing now · 136 backlogged · 56 wish listed

How long? Main story 1h · 100% 3h (from 2 logged playthroughs)

In the game, each player controls one of the two Bubble Dragons, Bub and Bob. The player can move along platforms, as well as jump to those above and to the side, similar to most platform games. The player can also blow bubbles. These can trap enemies, who are defeated if the bubble is then burst by the player's spiny … Read more
In the game, each player controls one of the two Bubble Dragons, Bub and Bob. The player can move along platforms, as well as jump to those above and to the side, similar to most platform games. The player can also blow bubbles. These can trap enemies, who are defeated if the bubble is then burst by the player's spiny back. Bubbles that contain enemies can be popped at the same time resulting in different foods being projected around the level. Each enemy trapped in a bubble equates to a different food. Food is consumed and transferred to points (an increasing scale of 1000 points is awarded for each enemy burst in tandem with another meaning: one enemy burst equals one food item worth 1000 points, two enemies burst equals two food items worth 1000 and 2000 points, three enemies burst equals three food items worth 1000, 2000 and 4000 points, and so on), which results in earning lives. These same bubbles also float for a time before bursting, and can be jumped on, allowing access to otherwise inaccessible areas. Players progress to the next level once all enemies on the current level are defeated. Enemies turn "angry" — becoming pink-colored and moving faster — if they are the last enemy remaining, escape from a bubble after being left too long or a certain amount of time has been spent on the current level. A monster will also become angry if either player collects a skull (the only negative item in the game), and the monster is hit by the resulting comet crossing the screen (however, this is a rare occurrence). After a further time limit expires, an additional invincible enemy appears for each player, actively chasing them using only vertical and horizontal movements. These do not need to be defeated to complete the level, and disappear once a player's life is lost. Contact with enemies and their projectiles (rocks, lasers, fireballs, etc.) results in death. Read less
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Details

Developers
Taito
Publishers
Taito
Genres
Arcade, Platform, Puzzle
Themes
Action, Fantasy, Kids
Franchises
Bubble Bobble
Series
Bubble Bobble

Release dates

  • Jun 16, 1986 (Full Release) (Japan) Arcade
  • 1986 (Full Release) (North_America) Arcade

Also available on

Related

Bundled in

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Remakes

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Featured in lists

NES by KiingShady · 39 games · 0
Childhood by tylerisrandom · 92 games · 0

Rating distribution

5 stars
143
4 stars
264
3 stars
279
2 stars
50
1 star
8
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Community All Reviews Statuses

Yungbeck

Review Yungbeck 3/5 · May 16, 2022

This Game Blows

bb

Through 100 Levels of puzzles, monsters, riches and candy, Bubble Bobble takes you on a pleasant but challenging journey. This game was all the rage when I was little, but I never really got into it back then. I appreciate it way more today as both my patience and skill has evolved. The bubbly design in BB is great, …

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bb

Through 100 Levels of puzzles, monsters, riches and candy, Bubble Bobble takes you on a pleasant but challenging journey. This game was all the rage when I was little, but I never really got into it back then. I appreciate it way more today as both my patience and skill has evolved. The bubbly design in BB is great, so is the music and the gameplay in general. You blow your enemies inside bubbles and pop them! - Collect the fruit/treasure - advance to the next stage. Simple, fun, challenging game by Taito that stands the test of time and spawned a few good sequels.

[3] / [5]

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jay.dino

Review jay.dino 3/5 · Jun 28, 2016

Platform:

Sega Master System version.

Graphics/Sound:

The graphics on the Master System are I think closest to the Arcade original, that's why I chose this version for playthrough. The dinosaur characters are extremely cute which is one of the major reasons why people go and try this game, the game's sequels don't have this as a main character anymore and …

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Platform:

Sega Master System version.

Graphics/Sound:

The graphics on the Master System are I think closest to the Arcade original, that's why I chose this version for playthrough. The dinosaur characters are extremely cute which is one of the major reasons why people go and try this game, the game's sequels don't have this as a main character anymore and remained quite a tad more obscure I think. The sound through the Master System sound chip might feel a bit more annoying over time, but at the same time it sounds so pleasantly retro, and fits the simple graphics well. Of course it's the same loop over and over, but that also kind of fits the theme.

Gameplay:

It's an early platformer but it's very unique in several aspects. First off, each level is only screen sized, but they make up for that with sheer quantity (200 levels in the Master System version). Second and most notable while playing is the way to get rid of monsters. First you trap monsters in bubbles and pop them. But that's only the most simple way. There is tons of possibilities to get rid of monsters throughout the levels, be it fireballs, waterfalls, lightning or magic spells. Everything can happen, and that's part of the charm of this game. You have a bunch of items popping up in the levels but there is so many different ones that you don't know what will happen when you take the item. Might be that you jump 5 levels, or you suddenly can run faster, or all the enemies are afraid of you. Or you simply get some points. Both a flaw and the strength of this game is that the game rules seem to largely reset in each level. So you never know what's gonna happen.

Difficulty:

It starts out pretty easy, first 15 levels or so you think this is a kids game. But let me tell you later on this becomes a real challenge. I kind of have a feeling that the Master System is unnecessarily tedious in some aspects (you can ride your bubbles by jumping correctly on them, but it's mindbogglingly difficult to do without popping the bubble), but I haven't tried other versions so I don't know if it's an inherent mechanic in the game or this version. Some levels you can pass in mere seconds, some took me about half an hour of tries until I finally made it. The weird physics also make it harder. It seems that you can always kind of jump through all blocks but only from below and not the sides and on some other edge cases but you never know if a jump will work unless you try it.

Conclusion:

It starts off as a pretty simple and kind of boring game. But later on it becomes a really trippy addicting little game, that offers many surprises, wtf moments and laughs. Of course this game is dated and is far from being flawless, the controls are a bit wonky at times. But overall this is a very charming game, which I recommend you play further than the first 20 levels to see what makes it great.

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Westane

Review Westane 2/5 · Mar 30, 2015

Review / Playthrough

History:
Another game I'd probably seen a million times as a kid and never played. What I did play a metric TON of though was Bust-A-Move in the arcades.

Expectations:
When I first got this game, my cousin and I played a bit of it and had NO idea what was going on. Now that I've done just a tiny …

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History:
Another game I'd probably seen a million times as a kid and never played. What I did play a metric TON of though was Bust-A-Move in the arcades.

Expectations:
When I first got this game, my cousin and I played a bit of it and had NO idea what was going on. Now that I've done just a tiny bit of research, I know what I'm supposed to do, and it actually looks really fun! Making it all the way to level 99 though? We'll see...

Night 1:

wpid-20150307_115034.jpg

Understanding it is one thing. "Getting it" is another entirely.

I played up to lv30, and every stage had me thinking, "Why am I doing this?" The game, to me, just wasn't clicking. I gave it about an hour and a half to try to grab and it just kept missing.

Right, blow bubbles at the guys, eat the fruits, drink the martini, pop the bubbles, next stage, blow bubbles, eat fruits, pop lightning, ride water slide... Ever level makes it harder to reach the guys, or makes the guys do different things. I understand what the game wants me to do, I just don't see the incentive.

I'm sure the game is fun for some people, probably more so back then than now. I am not those people.

Liked:
That damn music. It looped over and over and over and I never got sick of it. Some of the levels made me laugh.

Disliked:
Level design was awkward in the sense that it was never clear where you could actually jump to, walk through, etc. The gravity and physics in the game are completely bizarre, and I never knew how my character was going to jump or fall, making jumping around extremely tedious.

Play it Again?
Probably not, unless someone really wants to fire up multiplayer. I just didn't find this one fun.

Personal Score:

Fun : 12 Relevance : 13 Replayability : 15 Survivability : 10 Total : 50
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