Site Notice |
---|
We have a limited coverage policy. Please check our coverage page to see which articles are allowed. |
Difference between revisions of "Picross 3D"
m |
m (Text replacement - "|grb=" to "|grac=") |
||
(2 intermediate revisions by the same user not shown) | |||
Line 12: | Line 12: | ||
|players=1 | |players=1 | ||
|predecessor=''[[Picross DS]]'' | |predecessor=''[[Picross DS]]'' | ||
− | |successor=''[[Picross 3D Round 2]]'' | + | |successor=''[[Picross 3D: Round 2]]'' |
|releasena=May 3, 2010 | |releasena=May 3, 2010 | ||
|releasejp=March 12, 2009 | |releasejp=March 12, 2009 | ||
Line 21: | Line 21: | ||
|pegi=3 | |pegi=3 | ||
|usk=0 | |usk=0 | ||
− | | | + | |grac= |
|oflc= | |oflc= | ||
|elspa= | |elspa= | ||
Line 28: | Line 28: | ||
'''''Picross 3D''''' is a {{wp|nonogram}} puzzle game released for the [[Nintendo DS]] by [[HAL Laboratory]], a follow-up to ''[[Picross DS]]'' released in 2007. Outside Japan, the game was released as part of Nintendo's [[Touch! Generations]] line of games. | '''''Picross 3D''''' is a {{wp|nonogram}} puzzle game released for the [[Nintendo DS]] by [[HAL Laboratory]], a follow-up to ''[[Picross DS]]'' released in 2007. Outside Japan, the game was released as part of Nintendo's [[Touch! Generations]] line of games. | ||
− | In October 2015, a follow-up title, ''[[ | + | In October 2015, a follow-up title, ''[[Picross 3D: Round 2]]'', was released for [[Nintendo 3DS]] in Japan. The game was later released worldwide in 2016. |
==Blurb== | ==Blurb== | ||
Line 64: | Line 64: | ||
|media=Nintendo DS Game Card | |media=Nintendo DS Game Card | ||
|gamesize= | |gamesize= | ||
− | |||
|support=[[Nintendo Wi-Fi Connection]] (online sharing) | |support=[[Nintendo Wi-Fi Connection]] (online sharing) | ||
− | |||
|input=Nintendo DS stylus | |input=Nintendo DS stylus | ||
}} | }} |
Latest revision as of 11:47, 20 June 2021
Picross 3D | ||||||||||||||
立体ピクロス Rittai Picross | ||||||||||||||
| ||||||||||||||
| ||||||||||||||
| ||||||||||||||
|
Picross 3D is a nonogram puzzle game released for the Nintendo DS by HAL Laboratory, a follow-up to Picross DS released in 2007. Outside Japan, the game was released as part of Nintendo's Touch! Generations line of games.
In October 2015, a follow-up title, Picross 3D: Round 2, was released for Nintendo 3DS in Japan. The game was later released worldwide in 2016.
Blurb
North American box
Break into the next dimension of mind-bending puzzles!
Track the numbers to uncover the hidden shape! Beginners and Picross veterans alike will love this puzzle game that's easy to pick up but hard to put down!
Numbers show you how many cubes are part of the hidden shape.
Mark the ones you want to keep...
...and smash the ones you don't!
It's a cell phone!
Over 365 puzzles! That's more than a puzzle every day for a full year!
PAL box
A mind-expanding puzzle game with a new dimension!
Use the hint numbers to uncover the hidden shape. Beginners and Picross veterans alike will like this easy-to-pick-up-game (but impossible to put down) puzzle game.
Hints show you how many cubes are part of the hidden shape.
Mark the ones you want to keep...
...and remove those you don't.
It's a mobile phone!
Over 350 puzzles spanning a range of difficulty levels, from beginner to expert!
Gameplay
The game keeps the same general idea of picross, though in translating it to 3D some aspects have been changed. Rather than filling in squares to create an image, the player mus chip away at cubes in each row and column to create a 3D shape at the end out of the remaining squares. Most rows and columns features a number on the cubes which tells how many there should be when the image is finally completed, while circled numbers indicate that the total number of cubes are divided into groups rather than listing multiple numbers. Players can switch between a paintbrush to paint cubes that will stay, and a hammer that breaks them. If the player breaks a cube that is meant to be part of the final image, they are given a strike, and if the player receives five strikes they must start the puzzle over.
Players are able to create their own puzzles and share them over Nintendo Wi-Fi Connection, as well as download other players' puzzles.
Technical details
|