Luigi’s Mansion Arcade

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It’s been a long time since I’ve been to a proper arcade (well, at least as proper as they come these days).  My local bowling alley has a decent sized collection of aging and decaying ticket games off to the side of the lanes, but I don’t really count that.  I recently visited a more well-equipped venue, and I was incredibly surprised to see a cabinet based on Luigi’s Mansion.  I’m a big fan of Luigi’s Mansion: Dark Moon on the 3DS, so I had to give the game a go once it was free.

Luigi’s Mansion Arcade is heavily based off of its 3DS counterpart.  I played through two levels which appeared to me to be exact replicas of the Gloomy Manor and Old Clockworks stages of the handheld game.  As far as I can tell, I think the game just takes the exact levels and art assets from Dark Moon and scales them up to a big screen experience.  And the game looks great, despite everything originally being designed for a tiny handheld display.  It’s a testament to the strength of the visual design that was present in the excellent original.

Luigi’s Mansion Arcade is probably best grouped with the lightgun games, although it’s not really a shooter.  The machine features two (one for each player) fairly hefty and solid replicas of Luigi’s Poltergust 5000, which is the gun peripheral used to play the game.  If you’ve never played a Luigi’s Mansion game, then the brief explanation is that Luigi explores a series of haunted mansions using a vacuum-like contraption, the Poltergust, to capture the various spooky ghosts that evilly inhabit each residence.  There are two buttons on the arcade game’s Poltergust peripheral.  One on the top is used to blast a bright flash of light (the Strobulb) that stuns the ghosts and makes them vulnerable to attack.  Once stunned, the button on the Poltergust’s grip can be used to start vacuuming in the specters.  

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Gameplay mostly consists of Luigi slowly making his way through each mansion of the game, with the players having a first person view of his perspective.  The game is on-rails, so there is no direct control of Luigi’s movement, but there are a few branching paths offered in each level.  During the downtimes of the game, the players can aim the Poltergust at various objects that decorate each mansion to try to suck out some some loose coins to add to their score.  Each time you suck up a coin, there is a very satisfying *ka-chink* recoil that is triggered in the peripheral’s force feedback.  After a bit of this, you’ll begin to hear the snickering of ghosts or catch glimpses of them preparing an ambush, and this is the cue to get ready for a fight.

Combat consists of flash stunning the ghosts before they can attack, and then using the suction on the Poltergust to vacuum them into captivity.  If you know the home games, then you’ll know that when vacuuming up a ghost, you need to pull them in the opposite direction to which they’re travelling.  This is featured in the arcade game by aiming the poltergust away from the ghost as you’re capturing them.  So, for instance, if the ghost is moving toward the right side of the screen, you need to aim the Poltergust to the left side of the screen to more quickly reel it into the vacuum.  Each ghost has a health counter that depletes as you wrestle with it, and the ghost is finally captured when this counter hits zero.

I’ve always found Luigi’s Mansion to be a rather hectic game.  You see, as you are working on wrangling in one ghost, other ghosts usually come out to attack.  The player is defenseless while using the vacuum, which means that they need to properly time when to let go of the ghost they’re currently capturing.  I don’t think this is necessarily obvious to someone who has never played a Luigi’s Mansion games.  Sometimes, there’s a lot of ghosts that come out of the woodwork at one time, and the game becomes a bit overwhelming.

Most shooter-type games in the arcade are very simple, you just point, shoot, and reload.  And because of the nature of arcades, these types of games need to have a “walk-up and play” quality where anyone can drop money into a machine and quickly understand the basics of what they need to be doing.  But with the need to flash the ghosts first (which sometimes requires precise timing), suck them up, and play defensively, it may be a bit complex for someone who has no prior experience with the series.  I know the girl I enjoyed the game with expressed some confusion as to exactly what we were supposed to be doing.

It’s not that the game doesn’t try to explain all of this to you.  Quite the opposite.  As you move about outside of combat, there’s a constant stream of messages at the bottom of the screen from Professor E. Gadd, the inventor of the Poltergust.  But these messages are text only, since E. Gadd speaks in his “wabba wabba” style gibberish from the home games.  I actually didn’t pay much attention to these communiques, since I was too busy probing the environment for hidden coins during these segments.  I suspect most people will be similarly distracted from E. Gadd’s chattiness.

I really liked Luigi’s Mansion Arcade.  It’s a unique and visually attractive game, and the Poltergust is probably my favorite controller I’ve ever used in the arcade.  But  I feel it’s not necessarily a good arcade game, because I fear that it’s not particularly accessible.  It’s also an unusually slow game for the arcade, as combat is broken up by the walking sections which are fairly slow and uneventful.  But it’s a cool game, nonetheless.  Some might not remember, but Nintendo used to be a real presence in the arcade before their extraordinary success with the NES and Game Boy caused them to turn their entire focus on home gaming.  From my understanding, this game was actually developed by Sega on behalf of Nintendo, but regardless it’s still awesome to see Nintendo in the arcade again.

 

Posted on June 18, 2016, in Essays and tagged , , , , . Bookmark the permalink. 10 Comments.

  1. The Otaku Judge

    Cool discovery. I never imagined Lugi’s Mansion would be adapted into an arcade cabinet.

    Liked by 1 person

    • I agree. I hadn’t thought that new arcade games were even being released outside Japan, much less that Luigi’s Mansion, of all things, would make it to one.

      This is really interesting. Thanks for sharing the find.

      Liked by 2 people

  2. Matthew Stuber

    I was pleasantly surprised to find both this and the Mario Kart arcade game side by side while strolling through a local arcade. Good article, have you played the Mario Kart Arcade game yet?

    Liked by 1 person

    • I did try Mario Kart while I was there. I was not quite as impressed with it as Luigi’s Mansion. You know with a racing game in the arcade, you get a few laps and then your done. You don’t get to spend as much time with it as you do with an action game. Otherwise, I really liked how the game looked aesthetically. But I found the weapons system and drifting mechanic to be a little confusing since these deviate from what I’ve been ingrained with by the home games.

      Liked by 1 person

  3. Whoa! I forgot this thing existed! Thanks for sharing all this info about it! And I’m glad you enjoyed it!

    Liked by 1 person

  4. I did not realise these arcades still existed. I was interested in your comments about how rare modern arcades are, I remember when there were a few in the foyers of bowling alleys and leisure centres. I remember most were arcades of shooters (as mentioned in the article), fighting games and side-scrolling shooters, probably because (as suggested) they are easy to pick up and play and focus on point scoring and not story. It was also interesting to use a lightgun, rather than a controller. It seems annoying to have to be distracted by the text at the bottom of the screen while playing.
    Is this game played the same way as the Luigi Mansion game? I always thought those games were played in a similar way to the 3D Mario games.Are the graphics affected by the larger screen size? Do they resemble separately made designs? Or the same visuals from the console game, except enlarged?

    Like

    • Yeah, there are actually a few arcades in my city. The nicest ones seem to be bar-cades, which I find interesting. Arcades used to be the hangouts of adolescents and teenagers, but now the most successful ones i know are aimed at adults of drinking age.

      The home Luigi’s Mansion games are really more about exploration and puzzle-solving with some combat against ghosts strewn in. This has always separated them to me from the 3D Mario games which are still very focused on platforming and acrobatics.

      And really, the graphics look excellent in this game. They look almost the same as the 3DS game, but blown up to a larger screen. It was a great surprise to me that it looked as good as it did, but I guess the 3DS game was just visually really well done.

      Like

  5. I loved Dark Moon. A real underrated gem. Though part of the appeal was the exploration/puzzles which despite the slow walking sections you mention don’t sound like they are a part of the arcade game (understandably so given the nature of arcades). I’d still love to try this. Not many arcades around my way unfortunately, so nice to hear some impressions about it from you.

    Like

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