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Densha de GO!

(1999)

summary

Densha de Go! is a 1997 train simulator arcade game developed and published by Taito in Japan Players are tasked with guiding a train to its destination under a time limit while managing its acceleration and speed limitations It features real-world train stations and train lines from Japan, including the Yamanote Line and Keihin-Tohoku Line
The game was ported to several home consoles, including the Nintendo 64 and PlayStation The concept for Densha de Go! was inspired by designer Akira Saito's personal fascination with Japanese train lines and railroads He wanted to create a game that allowed players to familiarize themselves with driving a train The controls were his primary focus as he wanted them to be accurate and responsive, and to mimic the controls of a real train—his father worked for the Kyoto City Transportation Bureau Facilities Division, which made this easier to accomplish Saito included real-world railroads and trains to appeal towards other railroad enthusiasts, thinking that it could also attract more "ordinary" players for its realistic, familiar theme As arcades at the time were dominated primarily by racing and fighting games, he believed its unique concept could make it stand out Ports for the Game Boy Color and WonderSwan were published in 2000

Rating

Not enough ratings

Genres

Simulator
Arcade

Developer

Taito GM R&D Sect. #2

Publisher

Taito

Player Perspectives

First person

Themes

Non-fiction