Late last year, I published a post about
five overlooked Japanese GameBoy games I thought all interested parties should play as soon as humanly possible.
The titles highlighted in the write-up were
Astro Rabby,
Burning Paper,
Noobow,
Painter Momopie and
Taiyou no Tenshi Marlowe: Ohanabatake wa Dai-Panic, in case anyone would like a refresher.
At the time, I had no intention of following up that article. A couple of weeks ago, though, it struck me that I'd left more than a few sadly ignored GameBoy cartridges out of my original offering.
Will I ever publish a third? I'm not planning to, but who knows. There's no question there are more Japanese GameBoy carts that deserve to have the spotlight turned their way, so if I can corral five of them I may just push forward with yet another "overlooked Japanese GameBoy games" post.
In the meantime, I'd highly recommend you do whatever you need to do to check out the following:
Banishing Racer--I'm not so sure this game can be called "overlooked" at this point, especially among collectors. Still, I have a feeling your average Joe or Jane who only has a passing interest in Nintendo's first handheld system is completely unaware of
Banishing Racer's existence, so I'd say it's as deserving of a mention here as any other Japanese GameBoy cartridge.
As for why I think those Janes and Joes should play this Jaleco-made offering, my main reason is it's a side-scrolling platformer that stars an adorable anthropomorphic car. Also, it sports a breezy soundtrack that's surprisingly easy on the ears.
Unfortunately,
Banishing Racer is short (just five worlds with three stages in each) and tends toward being cheaply difficult, but controlling a car with googly eyes--which may or may not be "related" to the vehicle at the heart of another great Jaleco game,
City Connection--far outweighs both of those negatives in my humble opinion.
Before you run off and try to hunt down a copy of
Banishing Racer thanks to all the gushing I've done here, know that even loose carts can go for astronomical amounts these days.
Cave Noire--Oh, Konami. Once upon a time, you produced some absolutely wonderful games--like this one, in fact. Not that you bothered to bring
Cave Noire to Australia, Europe, North America or any other region outside of Japan.
Of course, it's hard to blame the powers that be at Konami for giving the thumbs down to a localization of this portable roguelike. After all, the genre wasn't all that popular among console gamers in the early 1990s. (
Cave Noire hit Japanese store shelves in 1991.) Thankfully, GameBoy systems were and continue to be region-free, so anyone who wants to put this curious title through its paces is free to do so.
As for what they'll encounter after booting it up: that would be a dungeon-crawling RPG that takes some interesting liberties with the pattern laid down by genre-maker
Rogue. You see,
Cave Noire is divided into four distinct dungeons. Each of these claustrophobic chambers focuses on a different victory condition: one tasks you with collecting a certain amount of money, one demands you save a certain number of trapped fairies and so on and so forth.
That combined with the bite-sized nature of the game's dungeons as well as its eye-pleasing visuals (which remind of
Final Fantasy Adventure, aka
Seiken Densetsu) and similarly adroit audio propels
Cave Noire into must-play territory even if you don't know a lick of the language.
Kitchen Panic--Full disclosure: this Coconuts Japan-published (in 1991) game is the least impressive of all the ones highlighted in this post. Thankfully, you also should be able to pick up a copy of
Kitchen Panic for less money than you'd have to pay to buy any of the other titles mentioned here.
As for why
Kitchen Panic fails to thrill as much as, say,
Cave Noire or
Peetan, that would be because it's basically an arcade-y action game that doesn't provide a whole lot of depth. That's not to say it's not fun. If you're in the mood for a nice little
Mario Bros.-esque score-attack game that sports cute backdrops and sprites (mostly of various insects),
Kitchen Panic is as good an option as any that were produced for the GameBoy during its long life.
One last comment before I shut my trap and move on to the next overlooked Japanese GameBoy title: if you suffer from
entomophobia you'll want to treat
Kitchen Panic like the plague, as killing creepy-crawlies is the focus of this
Bits Laboratory-made cartridge.