GioGio's Bizarre Adventure: Difference between revisions

From Videogame Morgue File

m (Fixing a typo and slightly rewording one sentence.)
(Slightly changing the release date(s) on the infobox)
 
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  |publisher = Capcom
  |publisher = Capcom
  |platforms = PlayStation 2
  |platforms = PlayStation 2
  |date = July 25, 2002 (Japan)<ref>[https://web.archive.org/web/20130829050009/https://www.famitsu.com/cominy/?m=pc&a=page_h_title&title_id=8049 Famitsu site listing (archived via Wayback Machine on August 29, 2013)]</ref><ref group="IGN" name="IGNdate">[https://www.ign.com/articles/2002/05/01/jojos-bizarre-adventure-date "Jojo's Bizarre Adventure Date" (May 1, 2002)]</ref><br>Unreleased (elsewhere)
  |date = {{Flag-JP}} July 25, 2002<ref>[https://web.archive.org/web/20130829050009/https://www.famitsu.com/cominy/?m=pc&a=page_h_title&title_id=8049 Famitsu site listing (archived via Wayback Machine on August 29, 2013)]</ref><ref group="IGN" name="IGNdate">[https://www.ign.com/articles/2002/05/01/jojos-bizarre-adventure-date "Jojo's Bizarre Adventure Date" (May 1, 2002)]</ref>
  |wikipedia = https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/GioGio's_Bizarre_Adventure
  |wikipedia = https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/GioGio's_Bizarre_Adventure
  |mobygames = https://www.mobygames.com/game/jojo-no-kimy-na-bken-gon-no-kaze
  |mobygames = https://www.mobygames.com/game/jojo-no-kimy-na-bken-gon-no-kaze
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== Covers ==
== Covers ==
<gallery widths="180px" heights="180px">
{{GalleryStart}}
GioGio cover art JP.jpg|Japanese cover art
{{GalleryCard
GioGio planned cover art USA with M rating.jpg|Alternate planned American cover art with ESRB rating
|file=GioGio cover art JP.jpg
</gallery>
|title=Japanese cover art
|date=2002
|country=JP
}}
{{GalleryCard
|file=GioGio planned cover art USA with M rating.jpg
|title=Alternate planned American cover art
|date=2002
|country=US
|description=By this time, the ESRB had assigned the game an M rating.
}}
{{GalleryEnd}}


== Previews ==
== Previews ==
<gallery widths="180px" heights="180px">
{{GalleryStart}}
GioGio Shonen Jump preview watermarked.jpg|Weekly Shōnen Jump (2001; watermarked by the Madman's Cafe)
{{GalleryCard
GioGio closeup 1 from preview in Shonen Jump watermarked.jpg|Closeup of Weekly Shōnen Jump preview (early 2001; watermarked by the Madman's Cafe)
|file=GioGio Shonen Jump preview watermarked.jpg
GioGio closeup 2 from preview in Shonen Jump watermarked.jpg|Closeup of Weekly Shōnen Jump preview (early 2001; watermarked by the Madman's Cafe)
|title=Weekly Shōnen Jump
GioGio preview in NextGen issue 78.jpg|NextGen (June 2001)
|date=Early 2001
GioGio preview in Official US PlayStation Magazine issue 45.jpg|Official U.S. PlayStation Magazine (June 2001)
|country=JP
GioGio preview in EGM issue 153.jpg|EGM (April 2002)
|description=Watermarked by the Madman's Cafe
GioGio preview in Official US PlayStation Magazine issue 57.jpg|Official U.S. PlayStation Magazine (June 2002)
}}
GioGio preview in PSM issue 59.jpg|PSM (June 2002)
{{GalleryCard
GioGio preview in GamePro issue 166.jpg|GamePro (July 2002)
|file=GioGio closeup 1 from preview in Shonen Jump watermarked.jpg
GioGio preview in GamePro issue 172.jpg|GamePro (January 2003)
|title=Weekly Shōnen Jump
</gallery>
|date=Early 2001
|country=JP
|description=Closeup #1; watermarked by the Madman's Cafe
}}
{{GalleryCard
|file=GioGio closeup 2 from preview in Shonen Jump watermarked.jpg
|title=Weekly Shōnen Jump
|date=Early 2001
|country=JP
|description=Closeup #2; watermarked by the Madman's Cafe
}}
{{GalleryCard
|file=GioGio preview in NextGen issue 78.jpg
|title=NextGen
|date=June 2001
|country=US
}}
{{GalleryCard
|file=GioGio preview in Official US PlayStation Magazine issue 45.jpg
|title=Official U.S. PlayStation Magazine
|date=June 2001
|country=US
}}
{{GalleryCard
|file=GioGio preview in EGM issue 153.jpg
|title=Electronic Gaming Monthly
|date=April 2002
|country=US
}}
{{GalleryCard
|file=GioGio preview in Official US PlayStation Magazine issue 57.jpg
|title=Official U.S. PlayStation Magazine
|date=June 2002
|country=US
}}
{{GalleryCard
|file=GioGio preview in PSM issue 59.jpg
|title=PSM
|date=June 2002
|country=US
}}
{{GalleryCard
|file=GioGio preview in GamePro issue 166.jpg
|title=GamePro
|date=July 2002
|country=US
}}
{{GalleryCard
|file=GioGio preview in GamePro issue 172.jpg
|title=GamePro
|date=January 2003
|country=US
|description=Based on the Japanese version of the final game
}}
{{GalleryEnd}}
{{#evu:https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dyjnlaZl85g|description=TGS 2001 trailer (Japanese)|container=frame|dimensions=360|alignment=inline|valignment=top}}
{{#evu:https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dyjnlaZl85g|description=TGS 2001 trailer (Japanese)|container=frame|dimensions=360|alignment=inline|valignment=top}}
{{#evu:https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=k9PHPiqz3vA|description=E3 2002 trailer (watermarked by GameSpot)|container=frame|dimensions=360|alignment=inline|valignment=top}}
{{#evu:https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=k9PHPiqz3vA|description=E3 2002 trailer (watermarked by GameSpot)|container=frame|dimensions=360|alignment=inline|valignment=top}}

Latest revision as of 23:04, 8 March 2022

GioGio's Bizarre Adventure (JoJo's Bizarre Adventure: Golden Wind[note 1] in Japanese) is a 3D action game that adapts part 5 of the manga JoJo's Bizarre Adventure. It was developed and published by Capcom, who made a 2D fighting game based on part 3 four years earlier. The graphics utilize a brand of cel-shading dubbed "Artistoon"[2][3][4] to emulate the source material's art style. A planned release outside of Japan never materialized.

History[edit]

Capcom first announced the game during the 2001 Jump Festa (held on December 23 & 24, 2000), stating simply that it would be based on part 5 of JoJo's Bizarre Adventure.[5][mmcafe 1][IGN 2][IGN 3] Later that month, an issue of Weekly Shōnen Jump (the magazine that serialized the original manga at the time) revealed screenshots of the game to the public for the first time.[mmcafe 2][IGN 4] (These included a 3D model of Koichi Hirose, a character who would not physically appear in the final product.) The game's official website subsequently went up on February 8.[mmcafe 3]

The first trailer would debut at the 2001 Tokyo Game Show (held between March 30 and April 1). It focused on the game's graphics (mostly character models) in lieu of showing gameplay.[IGN 5] Closer to its release, the game would receive a second announcement at the conclusion of a Capcom vs. SNK 2 tournament in Tokyo on January 13, 2002 (alongside fellow Capcom game Auto Modellista). Hirohiko Araki, the manga's author, revealed more footage from the game in a pre-recorded video.[6][7] The first report of the title's Japanese release date - July 25, 2002 - came at the start of May,[IGN 1] with the official website being heavily revamped under two weeks before that date.[3]

Capcom first announced their intent to release the game outside of Japan in March 2003, alongside three other titles: Onimusha 2, Red Dead Revolver, and Auto Modellista.[IGN 6] Afterward, they would exhibit it at E3 (as JoJo's Bizarre Adventure)[IGN 7] and ECTS (as GioGio's Bizarre Adventure)[IGN 8][IGN 9] in 2002. The company targeted a release in October of that year[4][IGN 7] (which many sources reported as simply "fall"),[8][9][10][11] with the ESRB specifically listing October 24, 2002.[12] Some time between E3 and November 2002, the game was delayed to December. On the 12th of November, Capcom announced a second delay to Feburary 14, 2003 as part of a larger schedule adjustment.[13] Capcom appears to have revised the game's release schedule once again around early 2003, though sources conflict on when the new window actually was: GamePro claimed that it would release in November of that year,[14] whereas Entertainment Weekly suggested that it would come out in the summer.[15] With no official story, some Internet users took to expressing confusion about the game's disappearance - not helped by American retailers listing release dates in May[16] or June[17] of that year. By the time Eurogamer covered Capcom's lineup of games at E3 2003, they interpreted GioGio's absence as a sign that its Western release had been canceled entirely.[18] Ultimately, the game would never get an official release outside of Japan.

Covers[edit]

Previews[edit]

TGS 2001 trailer (Japanese)
E3 2002 trailer (watermarked by GameSpot)
Japanese trailer

Interviews[edit]

Advertising[edit]

Japanese television commercials (circa 2002)[edit]

30 seconds long
15 seconds long
30 seconds long (with heavy narration)

Reviews[edit]

Official websites (archived via Wayback Machine)[edit]

Character videos[edit]

Books[edit]

GioGio Everything About Golden Wind guidebook cover JP.jpg
JoJo's Bizarre Adventure: Everything About Golden Wind (ジョジョの奇妙な冒険 黄金の旋風のすべて)

A thorough introduction to every character & every stage!
A total of 27 pages are dedicated to exclusive interviews: one with the development staff and one solely with Hirohiko Araki!!!
Everything about "Golden Wind" draws near in this massive 300-page volume!!!! [JP site 1]

ISBN 978-4-087791-8-84

Forum posts[edit]

2chan (Japanese)[edit]

Game-specific threads[edit]

English[edit]

Capcom BBS (archived via Wayback Machine)[edit]

IGN boards[edit]

Dedicated subforum (archived via Wayback Machine)[edit]
Fighting Game Board[edit]

Histories[edit]

Short video narrative explaining the game's non-release outside of Japan

Other links[edit]

Notes[edit]

  1. Some official English localizations of JoJo media render the subtitle in Italian as Vento Aureo.

References[edit]

The Madman's Cafe[edit]

IGN[edit]

Official Japanese website[edit]

  1. This text is a very rough English translation of the book's description on the "information" page (archived via Wayback Machine). The original text, for reference:

    全キャラ&全ステージをあますことなく徹底紹介!

    荒木飛呂彦先生単独インタビュー&開発スタッフインタビュー総計27ページ独占掲載ッ!!!

    『黄金の旋風』のすべてに、300ページ超の大ボリュームでせまるッ!!!!