Developer(s) | Teyon |
---|---|
Publisher(s) | Teyon |
Platform(s) | Nintendo DSi (DSiWare) |
Release | |
Genre(s) | Puzzle |
Mode(s) | Single-player |
Robot Rescue is a puzzle game developed by Teyon for the Nintendo DSi. It was available for download at the Nintendo DSi Shop for 200 Nintendo DSi Points.
Gameplay
A player's goal is to free robots trapped in an evil computer labyrinth. Missions are full of deadly traps making the game more and more difficult with each level. The objective is to guide robots to the exit through 45 labyrinths avoiding traps and obstacles such as mines, cloning machines and more. All robots are linked together, so when the player steers one of them, all are moved. Rash moves can destroy one of the robots and restart the mission.
Tiles
The following tiles can be found in the labyrinths:
- Red/yellow door - blocks the robot's way.
- Red/yellow button - opens red/yellow doors.
- Teleporter - transfers robots to a teleporter exit.
- Teleporter exit - a place where robots are teleported.
- Mine - blows robots up.
- Conveyor belt - moves robots automatically till the end of the belt.
- Short circuit trap - destroys robots.
- Glue stain - causes a temporary blockade of the robot's movement (1 move).
- Cloning machine - duplicates robots, clones emerge at all cloning machine exits.
- Cloning machine exit - a place where robots show after cloning.
- Exit - a destination point.
Reception
Robot Rescue received an overall score of 8.0 from IGN.
Sequels
- Robot Rescue 2 (DSiWare)
- Robot Rescue 3D (Nintendo eShop for Nintendo 3DS)
- Robot Rescue Revolution (Steam and PlayStation Network for PlayStation 3 and PlayStation Vita)
See also
References
- Robot Rescue out today in the U.S.
- Archived 2019-01-30 at the Wayback MachineRobot Rescue's overview at the game's site Archived 2019-01-30 at the Wayback Machine
- Archived 2019-01-30 at the Wayback MachineRobot Rescue site at Teyon Archived 2019-01-30 at the Wayback Machine
- Robot Rescue's review at IGN
External links
- Robot Rescue's site at Teyon.com Archived 2019-01-30 at the Wayback Machine