Meteos Online (lost online computer video game; 2006): Difference between revisions

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{{InfoboxLost
|title=<center>Meteos Online</center>
|image=Meteos-Online-Logo.png
|imagecaption=''Meteos Online'' logo.
|status=<span style="color:red;">'''Lost'''</span>
}}
==About==
==About==
'''''Meteos Online''''' (''メテオスオンライン'') was a Japanese online computer game published by Hangame and developed by Q Entertainment that ran from November 22nd, 2006 to October 31st, 2007 when it's game servers where shutdown at 5:00 PM JST (Japan Standard Time)<ref>[https://web.archive.org/web/20071128014425/http://www.meteosonline.jp/ Meteos Online Index Page Replaced] ''Retrieved April 4, 2023''</ref>.  
'''''Meteos Online''''' (''メテオスオンライン'') was a Japanese online computer game published by Hangame and developed by Q Entertainment that ran from November 22nd, 2006 to October 31st, 2007 when it's game servers where shutdown at 5:00 PM JST (Japan Standard Time)<ref>[https://web.archive.org/web/20071128014425/http://www.meteosonline.jp/ Meteos Online Index Page Replaced] ''Retrieved April 4, 2023''</ref>.  

Revision as of 00:46, 5 April 2023

Meteos-Online-Logo.png

Meteos Online logo.

Status: Lost

About

Meteos Online (メテオスオンライン) was a Japanese online computer game published by Hangame and developed by Q Entertainment that ran from November 22nd, 2006 to October 31st, 2007 when it's game servers where shutdown at 5:00 PM JST (Japan Standard Time)[1].

History

Meteos Online was a predecessor to Meteos, released on the Nintendo DS in 2005 developed by the same developers of Meteos Online, Q Entertainment. The service would run on a server that players would connect to using the Meteos Online client which was downloadable on Meteos Online's website. The Meteos Online team started off as six people from it's development team which would grow to around 17 people when released[2].

Gameplay

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Meteos Online played very similarly to it's predecessor released on the Nintendo DS -- A match-3 puzzle game that would launch blocks (referenced in the game as Meteos) up into the air. When the blocks reach the very top of the player's board (known as a grid), the game would award the player with points and the type of blocks that went off screen (also known as materials). Each character didn't just have different looks, but different planets that had their own twists such as different grid sizing, different materials, or even changing the gravity of the blocks launched.

One of the noticeable changes about Meteos Online's gameplay was that players could either use a combination of either a graphical tablet, computer mouse to manually select and drag blocks around the play-area. If the player were to use a keyboard, when selecting a block with the computer cursor, blocks could be quickly moved from end to end. This made most players use a combination of both a mouse/tablet and a keyboard to be as fast as possible.

Another noticeable change was the ability to move block both vertically and horizontally. On Meteos Online's original DS port, blocks could only be moved vertically.

Meteos Online also had avatars that would walk around the player's board that players could get clothing for from events and from the Metegacha which is also a new addition.

Closure

The reason for Meteos Online shutting down is still unknown to anyone. Months before the game's closure, a update/post was uploaded to the Meteos Online site announcing that the service would shutdown on October 31, 2007[3].

Gallery

References