Little Nemo: The Dream Master

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Little Nemo: The Dream Master

Little Nemo - Dream Master, The - NES - USA.jpg

NES - USA - 1st Edition.

Developer Capcom
Publisher Capcom
Published 1990-09-??
Platforms NES
Genres Licensed, Platformer
Themes Adventure, Cartoon, Surreal
Series Little Nemo
Distribution Commercial

Little Nemo: The Dream Master is a platform action adventure game developed and published by Capcom and first released on the NES in September 1990. It is based on the film Little Nemo: Adventures in Slumberland which is based on the original Little Nemo in Slumberland comic strip.

Personal

Own?No.
Won?No.

I first saw this game in a television commercial on TV in 1990, and it looked really interesting. I think I saw it in Nintendo Power and other gaming magazines and kept being impressed by it. I even tried making a similar style of game using Game-Maker, though I hadn't yet actually played the game, so I was just trying to duplicate pictures of the level 1 map from memory. I first played it at my friend Chris's house who had rented it. We both found it to be really hard and we never made it past level 2. Later, my brother and I borrowed the game from someone and made it to level 3, which I don't think I've ever beaten. I've spent a fair amount of time hacking the game and recording the soundtrack, so I know just how difficult it really is and have no desire to try and get good enough to beat it.

Review

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4 4 8 7 3

Best Version: NES

— This section contains spoilers! —

Good

  • The graphics and animation are fantastic for an NES game.
  • Junko Tamiya's soundtrack is amazing. The songs really fit the theme of each level and even stand well on their own.
  • The game play mechanic is really great. Being able to "ride" various beasts in the game and use their abilities was very creative.
  • The game has fantastic atmosphere. Each level has its own mood and color palette. From a multi-media stance, the game is well-honed.

Bad

  • Enemies respawn far too easily. If their spawn point is even a few pixels off screen, they will come back. The designers either should have put a delay on how frequently they respawn, or just kept track of which enemies had been killed in the level.
  • While it's nice to see characters from the film, they only play bit roles.
  • I don't like how you can be hurt by the animals that can be your friends after they're fed candy.
  • The game manual isn't very well-made. It doesn't talk much about the game, and the cartoon art is pretty bad.

Ugly

  • The game is far too difficult to the point where it's more annoying than fun.
  • The dandelion seeds (float-fiends) are extremely frustrating to deal with.

Media

Box Art

Documentation

Maps

Videos

Commercial.
Longplay.

Play Online

Famicom, NES (Europe), NES (USA)

Representation

Strong female character?FailThe Princess of Slumberland is a damsel in distress. Other than her, some of the enemies could be considered female.
Bechdel test?FailNo women ever talk to each other.
Strong person of color character?FailEvery character is white.
Queer character?FailThere are no queer characters.

Credits

Role Staff
Executive Producer Tokuro Fujiwara (Arthur)
Game Designer Tatsuya Minami (Mickey)
Programmers Yoshito Ito (Leo), Yamaken
Character Designers Naoya Tomita (Tom Pon), Yoshifumi Onishi (Toshichan), Eanie, Natsue Ueda (Onatsu), Oharu
Music and Sound Effects Junko Tamiya (Gonzou)

Titles

Language Native Transliteration Translation
English Little Nemo: The Dream Master
Japanese パジャマヒーロー NEMO Pajama Hiro Nimo Pajama Hero Nemo

Links

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