Yoshi's Cookie: Difference between revisions

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{{articleabout|the game|the item of a similar name|''[[Yoshi Cookie]]''}}
{{about|the game|the food item|[[Yoshi Cookie]]|the [[glider]] in [[Mario Kart Tour]]|[[Yoshi's Cookies]]}}
{{Infobox
{{distinguish|Yoshi and Cookies}}
|title=Yoshi's Cookie
{{game infobox
|image=[[Image:YoshisCookieNES.gif]]<br>'''NES box art.'''
|image=[[File:Yoshi's Cookie NES - Box NA.jpg|200px]]<br>NES box art<br>[[File:Yoshi's Cookie GB - Box NA.png|200px]]<br>Game Boy box art<br>[[File:Yoshi'sCookieSNES.jpg|200px]]<br>SNES box art
|developer=[[Bullet-Proof Software]]
|developer=[[Nintendo R&D 1]] (NES and Game Boy)<br>[[Bullet-Proof Software]] (SNES)
|publisher=[[Nintendo]]
|publisher=[[Nintendo]] (NES and Game Boy) <br> [[Bullet-Proof Software]] (SNES)
|designer=
|release= '''Famicom/NES:'''<br>{{flag list|Japan|November 21, 1992|USA|April 1993|Europe|1993<ref>{{cite|url=https://www.mobygames.com/game/4398/yoshis-cookie/releases/nes/|title=''Yoshi's Cookie'' (NES)|publisher=MobyGames|}}</ref>{{Better source}}|Sweden|April 28, 1994<ref>{{cite|url=https://www.mobygames.com/game/4398/yoshis-cookie/releases/nes/|title=''Yoshi's Cookie'' (NES)|publisher=MobyGames|}}</ref>{{Better source}}}} '''Game Boy:'''<br>{{flag list|Japan|November 21, 1992<ref>{{Cite|url=https://www.nintendo.co.jp/n02/dmg/cij/index.html|title=ヨッシーのクッキー|publisher=Nintendo Japan|language=ja}}</ref>|USA|April 1993|Europe|1993<ref>{{cite|url=https://www.mobygames.com/game/4398/yoshis-cookie/releases/gameboy/|title=''Yoshi's Cookie'' (Game Boy)|publisher=MobyGames|}}</ref>{{Better source}}}}'''SNES:'''<br>{{flag list|USA|June 1993|Japan|July 9, 1993<ref>{{cite|url=themushroomkingdom.net/games/yc-snes|title=''Yoshi's Cookie'' (SNES)|publisher=The Mushroom Kingdom|accessdate=May 31, 2024}}</ref>{{Better source}}|UK|1993<ref>{{cite|url=https://www.mobygames.com/game/4398/yoshis-cookie/releases/snes/|title=''Yoshi's Cookie'' (SNES)|publisher=MobyGames|}}</ref><ref>https://www.mariomuseum.com/archives/4805</ref>{{Better source}}|Australia|1993<ref>https://www.mariomuseum.com/archives/4805</ref>{{Better source}}}}'''Virtual Console (Wii):'''<br>{{flag list|Europe|April 4, 2008<ref>{{Cite|url=https://www.nintendo.com/en-gb/Games/Virtual-Console-Wii-/Yoshi-s-Cookie--280284.html|title=Yoshi's Cookie™ {{!}} Virtual Console (Wii) {{!}} Nintendo UK|publisher=Nintendo|language=en-gb|accessdate=November 13, 2024}}</ref>|USA|April 7, 2008|Japan|June 10, 2008|South Korea|November 11, 2008}}
|Director=
|languages={{languages|en_us=y|jp=y}}
|released= '''NES:''' <br> [[Image:Flag of Japan.png|22px]] November 21, 1992 <br> [[Image:Flag of USA.png|22px]] April, 1993 <br> [[Image:Flag of Europe.png|22px]] April 28, 1994 <ref>[http://themushroomkingdom.net/games/yc-nes NES release Date from TMK], retrieved 4-24-08</ref> <br> '''[[SNES]]:''' <br> [[Image:Flag of USA.png|22px]] June, 1993 <br> [[Image:Flag of Japan.png|22px]] July 9, 1993 <ref>[http://themushroomkingdom.net/games/yc-snes SNES release date from TMK], retrieved 4-24-08</ref> <br> '''[[Game Boy]]:''' <br> [[Image:Flag of Japan.png|22px]] November 21, 1992 <br> [[Image:Flag of USA.png|22px]] April, 1993 <br> [[Image:Flag of Europe.png|22px]] February 26, 1994 <ref>[http://themushroomkingdom.net/games/yc-gb GB release date from TMK], retrieved 4-24-08</ref><br>'''Virtual Console:''' <br> [[Image:Flag of Japan.png|22px]] June 10, 2008 <br> [[Image:Flag of USA.png|22px]] April 7, 2008 <br> [[Image:Flag of Europe.png|22px]] April 4, 2008  
|genre=[[Genre#Puzzle games|Puzzle]]
|genre=Puzzle
|modes=Single player, multiplayer
|modes=Single-player, two-player
|platforms=[[Family Computer]]/[[Nintendo Entertainment System]], [[Game Boy]], [[Super Nintendo Entertainment System|Super Famicom]]/[[Super Nintendo Entertainment System]], [[Virtual Console]] ([[Wii]])
|platforms=[[NES]], [[SNES]], [[Game Boy]], [[Virtual Console]]
|format={{format|fc=1|nes=1|snes=1|gb=1|wiidl=1}}
|input={{input|nes=1|snes=1|gb=1|classic=1}}
|input={{input|fc=1|nes=1|snes=1|gb=1|wmsideways=1|classic=1|wiigcn=1}}
|serials='''Game Boy:'''<br>{{flag list|Japan|DMG-CI-JPN}}
}}
}}
'''''Yoshi's Cookie''''' is a puzzle game not unlike Tetris developed by [[Bullet-Proof Software]] and released by [[Nintendo]] in [[1992]] for the [[NES]], [[SNES]], and [[Game Boy]]. It was later re-released for the [[GameCube]] alongside ''[[Dr. Mario 64]]'' (labeled ''Dr. Mario'') and ''Panel de Pon'' (the original version of ''[[Tetris Attack]]'') in the Japan-only game ''[[Nintendo Puzzle Collection]]'' in which a story mode is added. Though it is not a puzzle game, the mini-game ''Egg'' found in ''[[Game & Watch Gallery 3]]'' is somewhat similar to ''Yoshi's Cookie'' as it also involves [[Yoshi]] eating cookies falling from the sky. Also bearing similarity is the mini-game ''[[Mario's Cement Factory]]'' found in ''[[Game & Watch Gallery 4]]'', where Mario creates the Yoshi's Cookie cookies instead of cement in the modern version. The stage from the game also makes an appearance in ''[[Tetris DS]]''.
'''''Yoshi's Cookie''''' is a [[Genre#Puzzle games|puzzle]] game, similar to ''{{wp|Tetris}}'', developed by [[Nintendo R&D 1]] and published by [[Nintendo]] for the [[Nintendo Entertainment System|NES]] and [[Game Boy]] in 1992, and developed and published by [[Bullet-Proof Software]] for the [[Super Nintendo Entertainment System|SNES]] in 1993. Upon its release, ''Yoshi's Cookie'' received mixed to positive reviews. The Super Famicom received a re-release titled ''[[Yoshi no Cookie: Kuruppon Oven de Cookie]]'' with an added mode.
 
Additionally, a Japan-only remake for the [[Nintendo GameCube]] was included in ''[[Nintendo Puzzle Collection]]'', where it was bundled alongside ''[[Dr. Mario 64]]'' and ''[[Tetris Attack#Panel de Pon|Panel de Pon]]''. The remake added a story mode the previous three versions lacked. ''Nintendo Puzzle Collection'' also offers the original [[Family Computer|Famicom]] version as a [[Game Boy Advance]] [[Nintendo GameCube#Nintendo GameCube–Game Boy Advance Link Cable|link transfer]].
 
''Yoshi's Cookie'' was later ported to the [[Wii]]'s [[Virtual Console#Wii|Virtual Console]] in 2008, but it was delisted from the service on October 2013 in all regions except South Korea. Eventually, the game was later delisted from South Korea in 2019 due to the closure of the [[Wii#Wii Shop Channel|Wii Shop Channel]]. ''Yoshi's Cookie'' was also originally planned to be released on the [[Wii U]]'s [[Virtual Console#Wii U|Virtual Console]], but this ultimately never happened.<ref>{{cite|author=Nintendo of America|date=April 17, 2013|url=www.youtube.com/watch?v=6V5NJ9ZKfPo|title=Nintendo eShop - Wii U Virtual Console Sizzle Reel|publisher=YouTube|accessdate=May 31, 2024}}</ref>


==Gameplay==
==Gameplay==
The object of the game is to clear the stage of cookies, which appear from the top and the right of the screen. To clear cookies, the player needs an entire row of the same cookies either horizontally or vertically. To move the cookies, the player has to press A on a cookie and press a direction on the directional pad. Depending on the direction the player presses, the row the cookie is on is then moved either vertically or horizontally. There are six types of cookies: heart cookies, sunflower cookies, green cookies, checkered cookies, donuts and [[Yoshi Cookie]]s (shaped like [[Yoshi|Yoshi's]] head).
The objective of the game is to clear the stage of cookies, which appear from the top and the right of the screen. To clear cookies, the player needs an entire row of the same cookies (at least two) either horizontally or vertically. To move the cookies, the player has to press {{button|nes|A}}/{{button|gb|A}}/{{button|snes|A}} on a cookie and press a direction on the directional pad. Depending on the direction the player presses, the row the cookie is on is then moved either vertically or horizontally. There are six types of cookies: heart cookies, flower cookies, diamond cookies, checkered cookies, circular cookies, and [[Yoshi Cookie]]s (shaped like [[Yoshi]]'s head). The Yoshi Cookie can be used as a substitute for other cookies, allowing the player to eliminate rows of cookies without the proper piece(s). The game consists of two modes: Action and VS. The third mode, Puzzle, is exclusive to the SNES version.
[[Image:Yoshi's cookie.jpg|thumb|left|Yoshi eating a cookie.]]
 
The game consists of three modes: Action, VS, and Puzzle.  
===Action Mode===
[[File:YCScreen.png|200px|thumb|left|Action Mode in the NES version]]
Action Mode or 1P is a game consisting of 10 rounds, with each round containing 10 stages. Before the game starts, the player can set the round which who wants to play in, the falling speed of the blocks and the music. The player must clear all of the blocks to clear a stage. As time passes, more cookies appear from the top and the right, which speeds up the longer the player is in a stage. If a row or column of cookies at any time contains more than seven cookies, the [[Game Over|game is over]].
 
After the player beats a round, they can view a short cutscene with [[Mario]].
 
Clearing 15 cookies of one type in the same stage causes a Yoshi Cookie to generate, and that cookie's counter resets to zero.
 
Rounds 11-99 are also unlockable; within these rounds, the cookies are replaced by Mario enemies (except for the Yoshi Cookie), resembling the graphics from the original ''[[Yoshi (game)|Yoshi]]'' game. These rounds also add Koopa Troopa shells; the Koopa tiles do not materialize from the corners of the screen, and as such, can only be eliminated via the Yoshi-shaped cookies. To access the later rounds in the NES and Game Boy versions (as revealed in the game's ending), the player must do the following:
*Set the music type to "Off".
*Set the speed to "Hi".
*Set the round to "10"; then hold Up + Select to advance to round 11.
 
===VS Mode===
VS Mode is a simple 2 player game, with the player also able to challenge the computer in the SNES and Game Boy versions. The player starts off by picking one of four characters (except in the NES version): Mario, [[Princess Peach|Princess]], Yoshi, or [[Bowser]]. The GameCube version can be played with up to four players.
*Mario is a balanced character.
*Yoshi has stronger defenses against attacks, with the length of effects received from other players halved. The event shown appears for a longer time as Yoshi.
*The Princess has weaker defenses, meaning that events received from other players will have a longer duration on the Princess. The event shown appears for a shorter time as the Princess.
*Bowser has more powerful attacks, but the timer drains faster.
 
Each player has a 5×5 board. The goal of the game is to accumulate 25 points (with each match worth one point) before the opponent to win, although a handicap adjustment exists to start with more points. The player must make a match within the time limit, as allowing the time bar to fill up (or the fuse to run out) will result in a loss for the player.
 
The first player to win three rounds takes the match.
 
Aligning Yoshi Cookies will either benefit or harm the player. Depending on the special shown, the player should be careful not to penalize themselves.
;List of Yoshi Cookie effects
*'''Blind''': The player is temporarily unable to see the middle nine tiles of their board.
*'''Panic''': The player's board is shuffled and cannot take action while the board is being shuffled.
*'''Slave''': The player temporarily loses control of their board as it is being controlled by the player who triggered it (copying exactly what the player is doing). Nothing happens if Slave targets themselves.
*'''−3''': Subtracts three points.
*'''+3''': Adds three points.
*'''−7''': Subtracts seven points.
 
Beating all four computer opponents in single-player mode in the SNES version of the game unlocks four more opponents, who appear as simple palette-swaps of the original four. They also have different attributes than the original four opponents. They are a green Mario similar to [[Fire Mario|Fire Luigi]], a red [[Yoshi (species)|Yoshi]], a light-blue Princess Peach, and a blue Bowser similar to [[Bowser's Brother]].
 
===Puzzle===
[[File:DFRQ 125 1.png|200px|thumb|left|Puzzle Mode]]
This mode appears only in the SNES version of the game. The objective of Puzzle Mode is to clear the field with a limited number of moves. The puzzles range from simple to complex. There are a total of 100 puzzles, with ten rounds of ten puzzles each. Each puzzle is associated with a password, allowing the player to continue where they left off by inputting it.
{{br}}
 
==Staff==
{{main|List of Yoshi's Cookie staff}}
The Game Boy and NES versions were developed by [[Nintendo R&D 1]] and published by [[Nintendo]], with [[Gunpei Yokoi]] acting as the producer.
 
The SNES version was developed and published by [[Bullet-Proof Software]] as they retained the rights for the SNES version and Nintendo licensed the characters and allowed them to use the "Yoshi's Cookie" Branding. {{wp|Alexey Pajitnov}}, creator of ''{{wp|Tetris}}'', designed the puzzles.<ref name="np47">{{cite|title=''Nintendo Power'' Volume 47|date=April 1993|page=109|publisher=Nintendo of America|language=en-us}}</ref>


Action Mode is a game consisting of 10 rounds, each round containing 10 stages. Before the game starts, the player can set the round which they want to play in, the falling speed of the blocks and the music. After the player beats a certain stage, they are able to view a brief, humorous cutscene with [[Mario]]. Rounds 11-99 are also unlockable, and within them the cookies are replaced by Mario enemies (except for the Yoshi Cookie).
==Cutscenes==
The round completion cutscenes for Action Mode are as follows:


VS Mode is a simple 2 player/1 player vs. COM game. The player starts off by picking one of four characters (Mario, [[Princess Peach|Peach]], Yoshi, or [[Bowser]]). The goal of the game is to keep a lit fuse higher before it runs out and all the player's pieces go away. To keep the fuse higher, the player have to consistently clear rows of 5 against the player's opponent. Getting 5 Yoshi cookie's in a row would often give the player a special, such as the players covering up the player's opponent's screen with question mark blocks or taking control of the player's opponents field.  
*Round 1: Mario chases after a rolling ball (presumably cookie dough) and catches it, striking a pose.
*Round 2: Mario chases after the rolling ball, only ends up rolling with the ball when grabbing on.
*Round 3: Mario chases after the rolling ball, only to be humorously chased away by a larger bouncing ball (implied to be its parent)
*Round 4: The ball bounces before hitting a wall, which then causes it to roll backwards into Mario (who was right behind it), knocking him over while the ball spins erratically.
*Round 5: The ball spins erratically as Mario chases after it, only to end up eaten by Yoshi, to Mario's shock and Yoshi's amusement.
*Round 6: Mario chases the ball down a slope, only to end up overtaking it in speed.
*Round 7: The ball rolls then hits a wall and rolls back, with Mario proceeding to jump, only to end up squishing the ball.
*Round 8: The ball falls down a ledge after rolling. Mario chases after it, only to find himself tripping due to unknowingly being on the ball, and the ball rolling away as Mario falls onto his back.
*Round 9: The ball rolls to a cliffside as Mario chases after it, only for the ball to fall off the cliff, and ascend as an angel, with Mario looking sheepishly at the player.
*Round 10: The ball is rolling and Mario and Yoshi, from opposite sides of the screen, proceed to grab it and then strike poses alongside the ball.


The goal of Puzzle Mode is to clear the field with a limited number of moves. The puzzles range from simple to complex.
In the SNES version, the ball was revealed to be part of the Yoshi Cookie sign that fell off, and also has a slight animation of what occurs, and in the final one has Peach and Bowser joining the celebration during the credits.


The ''[[Nintendo Puzzle Collection]]'' version adds a story mode to the game, wherein Mario and Yoshi get exhausted from countless cookie deliveries, and Bowser steals their cookies while they sleep. The first five stages offer different opponents depending on the difficulty:
==Development==
''Yoshi's Cookie'' started as an arcade game named ''Hermetica'' (later renamed ''Archimedes'')<ref name="X">[https://x.com/gdri/timelines/609352873663705089 X thread] (April 20, 2015), English translation posted [http://gdri.smspower.org/wiki/index.php/Talk:Biox here]. Retrieved September 7, 2017</ref>{{dead link}} developed by the company Home Data. This incarnation of the game featured alchemy-themed graphics.<ref name="X"/> The game received a very poor reception when it was location-tested at arcades in Kansai and Tarumi, causing Home Data to abandon further development and sell the rights to the game to [[Bullet-Proof Software]].<ref name="X"/> Outside of answering design questions from designer Alexey Pajitnov, the creator of ''Hermetica'' had no involvement in the game's reworking as ''Yoshi's Cookie''.<ref name="X"/>


*'''Easy'''
It appears that, before ''Yoshi's Cookie'' began production, B.P.S. developed a generic version of "Hermetica" known as ''Inaro'' in 1991; a sample of this game was on the Blue Planet Software website in the 2000s.<ref>{{cite|deadlink=y|archive=web.archive.org/web/20060310185917/http://www.blueplanetsoftware.com/inaro.html|title="Inaro"|publisher=Blue Planet Software|accessdate=May 31, 2024}}</ref> Several home ports of ''Yoshi's Cookie'' feature copyright information referring to ''Inaro'', namely the Wii Virtual Console version.<ref>"INARO™ Game concept ©1991-2008 Intellectual Property Consultants, Inc., used, under license, by Nintendo." - ''Yoshi{{'}}s Cookie'', Virtual Console (digital manual)</ref>
*#[[Goomba]]
*#[[Cheep Cheep]]
*#[[Paratroopa]]
*#[[Boo]]
*#[[Spiny]]
*'''Normal'''
*#[[Koopa Troopa]]
*#[[Blooper]]
*#[[Bullet Bill]]
*#[[Eerie]]
*#[[Piranha Plant]]
*'''Hard'''
*#[[Buzzy Beetle]]
*#[[Rip Van Fish]]
*#[[Lakitu]]
*#[[Fishin' Boo]]
*#[[Hammer Bro]]


Regardless of the difficulty, the final two stages offer the same opponents, though their skill differs between each difficulty. Stage 6 lets the player face off against [[Thwomp]], followed by [[Magikoopa]]. Stage 7 is a best-three-out-of-five match against Bowser himself.
==Critical reception==
{| class="wikitable reviews"
!colspan="4" style="font-size:120%; text-align: center; background-color:silver"|Reviews
|-style="background-color:#E6E6E6"
|Release
|Reviewer, Publication
|Score
|Comment
|-
|[[Wii]]
|Marcel van Duyn, [http://www.nintendolife.com/reviews/vc/yoshis_cookie_nes Nintendo Life]
|6/10
|align="left"|"''Yoshi's Cookie is a decent puzzler that's a tad more original than puzzlers of a falling block nature, but we would suggest waiting for the SNES version to show up instead which, aside from improved audio and visuals that use sprites from Super Mario World, features more content via an added puzzle mode and amusing cutscenes.''"
|-
|Wii
|Lucas M.Thomas, [https://www.ign.com/articles/2008/04/07/yoshis-cookie-review IGN]
|6/10
|align="left"|"''Overall, Yoshi's Cookie is a fair and favorable puzzler that – while not a candidate for immediate recommendation – wouldn't be a waste of your Wii Points should you decide to spend 500 of them on it. It's one of Nintendo's more obscure puzzle designs, and it sets itself apart in that it's not a clone of the "falling block" style of Tetris like so many other puzzlers are. Give it a look if you're a fan of the genre looking for something that's just a bit different.''"
|-
|}
{{br}}


==Gallery==
==Gallery==
{{main-gallery}}
<gallery>
<gallery>
File:Yoshi'sCookieSNES.jpg|SNES box art.
YC - Yoshi cover art.png|Yoshi
File:Yoshi's Cookie batter quality Box 65.jpg|Game Boy box art.
ChefMario.png|Mario
File:YoshiCookieCartridge.jpg|The cartridge for ''Yoshi's Cookie''
YCSGB.png|Game Boy version on the Super Game Boy
Image:YCScreen.png|A screenshot of the game.
MarioYCSNES.png|Action Mode in the SNES version
YoshiCookieCartridge.jpg|The [[Game Boy]] cartridge
 
</gallery>
</gallery>
==Media==
{{main-media}}
{{media table
|file1=YC SNES Bullet-Proof Software International.oga
|title1=Bullet-Proof Software (International)
|file2=YC SNES Bullet-Proof Software Japanese.oga
|title2=Bullet-Proof Software (Japanese)
|file3=YC SNES Yoshi's Cookie.oga
|title3=Yoshi's Cookie
}}
==References in other games==
*''[[Game & Watch Gallery 3]]'': The Modern version of ''[[Egg (Game & Watch)|Egg]]'' has a Yoshi consuming various cookies, their designs coming straight from ''Yoshi's Cookie''.
*''[[Game & Watch Gallery 4]]'': Due to the Modern version of ''[[Mario's Cement Factory]]'' replacing cement creation with cookie baking, Mario is creating Yoshi Cookies as a result.
*''[[Tetris DS]]'': A stage from this game makes an appearance.
*''[[Paper Mario: The Thousand-Year Door]]'' and ''[[Super Paper Mario]]'': One of the cookies in the [[Zess Cookie]] and [[Sweet Cookie Snack]] icon resembles the checkerboard cookie from ''Yoshi's Cookie''.
*''[[Yoshi's Woolly World]]'': The [[Yoshi and Cookies]] stage is a reference to the game, and Yoshi Cookies appear as elements in the level.
*''[[Super Mario Odyssey]]'': In this title, Mario can wear a chef outfit that is identical to the one depicted in the NES version of ''Yoshi's Cookie''.
*''[[Mario Kart Tour]]'': The chef outfit from ''Super Mario Odyssey'' reappears in this game as the outfit for Mario (Chef). A glider named [[Yoshi's Cookies]], based off of the cookies in the game, is also featured.
*''{{iw|pikipedia|Pikmin 4}}'': The treasures {{iw|pikipedia|Cookie of Prosperity}}, {{iw|pikipedia|Cookie of Nibbled Circles}}, {{iw|pikipedia|Vanishing Cookie}}, {{iw|pikipedia|Love's Fortune Cookie}}, and {{iw|pikipedia|Hearty Container}} are all based off of cookies from ''Yoshi's Cookie''.
*''[[Princess Peach: Showtime!]]'': The cookies [[Patissiere Peach]] holds in the official artwork are from ''Yoshi's Cookie''.
==Names in other languages==
{{foreign names
|Jap=ヨッシーのクッキー
|JapR=Yosshī no Kukkī
|JapM=Yoshi's Cookie
}}


==Trivia==
==Trivia==
*In the NES and Game Boy versions, there was a cutscene at the title screen where Mario would walk onto a screen with a jar of cookies. He would then try to open it, to no avail. He then gets an idea and walks off the screen. Yoshi comes up soon afterward and eats the jar whole. Mario then reappears with a hammer and begins chasing Yoshi off the screen. Later, he returns back on screen holding the cookie jar, which was empty to begin with. This, however, bears no influence on the game itself.
[[File:ChefMario SuperMarioKun.jpg|thumb|''[[Super Mario-Kun]]'']]
*The SNES version of ''Yoshi's Cookie'' featured a slightly-updated version of Yoshi's appearance, in which he has a bigger head and shorter neck. This appearance was next seen in the ''[[Super Mario All-Stars]]'' version of ''[[Super Mario Bros. 3]]'', and ''[[Super Mario World 2: Yoshi's Island]]''.
*In the [[Family Computer]]/[[Nintendo Entertainment System|NES]] and [[Game Boy]] versions, there was a cutscene at the title screen where Mario would walk onto a screen with a jar of cookies. He would then try to open it, to no avail. He then gets an idea and walks off the screen. Yoshi comes up soon after and eats the jar whole. Mario then reappears with a hammer and begins chasing Yoshi off the screen. Later, he returns back on screen holding the cookie jar, which was empty to begin with. This, however, bears no influence on the game itself. This intro (slightly expanded to show Yoshi and Mario re-congregating and then striking a pose before walking off) was made for the SNES prototype of the game, but was taken out for the final release.
*In the Nintendo DS game "Tetris DS", puzzle mode is based on Yoshi's cookie.
*The backgrounds used in the SNES version resemble those from ''[[Super Mario World]]''.
*All of the opponents in the ''Nintendo Puzzle Collection'' version's story mode are taken from ''[[Super Mario World]]'', with the exception of Blooper and Hammer Bro.
*The Super Famicom and [[Super Nintendo Entertainment System]] version of ''Yoshi's Cookie'' featured a slightly-updated version of Yoshi's appearance, in which he has a bigger head, longer and more human-like arms and shorter neck. This appearance would be later used in ''[[Super Mario World 2: Yoshi's Island]]'' and later games. This game also marks the first time in-game that Yoshi's speech comprises of his name, a trait later used in ''[[Yoshi's Story]]'' and popularized by ''[[Super Smash Bros.]]''
*The music "VS Theme C" (which is 1P music B in the SNES version) is actually a rendition of ''Csikos Post'', a classical piece by Hermann Necke.
*The title screen in the SNES version is a parody of the {{wp|Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer}} logo.
*The cookies used in ''Yoshi's Cookie'' are also used in the modern version of ''Egg'' from ''[[Game and Watch Gallery 3]]''.
*''Hello Kitty no Beads Kōbō'' (ハローキティのビーズ工房), a Japan-exclusive [[Game Boy Color]] game, is effectively a sequel to ''Yoshi's Cookie''; however, it lacks any ''Super Mario'' elements. Its gameplay is derivative of the original game; the player must create lines of one specific type of tile, rather than clearing out all of the pieces. The copyright screen of the game states "©1992 Nintendo", referring to ''Yoshi no Cookie''{{'}}s release date.<ref>[http://sanriowiki.com/wiki/Puzzle_Collection:_Hello_Kitty_no_Beads_Koubou "Puzzle Collection: Hello Kitty no Beads Koubou" on the Sanrio Wiki]</ref>
*The game is similar to many modern games such as Bejeweled.


==References==
==References==
<references/>
<references/>
<br clear=all>
 
{{Yoshi series}}
==External links==
{{NIWA|HardDrop=1|StrategyWiki=1}}
*[https://www.nintendo.co.jp/n02/dmg/cij/ Japanese website (Game Boy)]
*[https://www.nintendo.co.jp/wii/vc/vc_ysc/ Japanese website (Wii Virtual Console)]
*[https://www.nintendo.com/games/detail/ZWvBQbcjjx2JKDpm5igLi0nwt7Rk6tDH North American website]
*[https://www.nintendo.co.uk/Games/Virtual-Console-Wii-/Yoshi-s-Cookie--280284.html European website]
 
{{Yoshi games}}
{{GB}}
{{GB}}
{{VirtualConsole}}
{{Virtual Console}}
{{NES}}
{{NES}}
{{SNES}}
{{SNES}}
[[Category:Yoshi's Cookie|*]]
[[Category:Games]]
[[Category:Games]]
[[Category:Nintendo Entertainment System Games]]
[[Category:Family Computer games]]
[[Category:Super Nintendo Entertainment System Games]]
[[Category:Nintendo Entertainment System games]]
[[Category:Game Boy Games]]
[[Category:Super Nintendo Entertainment System games]]
[[Category:Virtual Console Games]]
[[Category:Game Boy games]]
[[Category:Puzzle Games]]
[[Category:Virtual Console games]]
[[Category:Puzzle games]]
[[Category:1992 games]]
[[Category:1992 games]]
[[Category:1993 games]]
[[Category:1993 games]]
[[Category:1994 games]]
[[de:Yoshi's Cookie]]
[[it:Yoshi's Cookie]]

Latest revision as of 22:30, November 28, 2024

This article is about the game. For the food item, see Yoshi Cookie. For the glider in Mario Kart Tour, see Yoshi's Cookies.
Not to be confused with Yoshi and Cookies.
Yoshi's Cookie
North American box art for Yoshi's Cookie on the Nintendo Entertainment System
NES box art
North American box art for Yoshi's Cookie on Game Boy
Game Boy box art
Yoshi's Cookie: Front cover, SNES version
SNES box art
For alternate box art, see the game's gallery.
Developer Nintendo R&D 1 (NES and Game Boy)
Bullet-Proof Software (SNES)
Publisher Nintendo (NES and Game Boy)
Bullet-Proof Software (SNES)
Platform(s) Family Computer/Nintendo Entertainment System, Game Boy, Super Famicom/Super Nintendo Entertainment System, Virtual Console (Wii)
Release date Famicom/NES:
Japan November 21, 1992[?]
USA April 1993[?]
Europe 1993[1][better source needed]
Sweden April 28, 1994[2][better source needed]
Game Boy:
Japan November 21, 1992[3]
USA April 1993[?]
Europe 1993[4][better source needed]
SNES:
USA June 1993[?]
Japan July 9, 1993[5][better source needed]
UK 1993[6][7][better source needed]
Australia 1993[8][better source needed]
Virtual Console (Wii):
Europe April 4, 2008[9]
USA April 7, 2008[?]
Japan June 10, 2008[?]
South Korea November 11, 2008[?]
Language(s) English (United States)
Japanese
Genre Puzzle
Mode(s) Single player, multiplayer
Format
Famicom:
Cartridge
NES:
Game Pak
Super NES:
Game Pak
Wii:
Digital download
Game Boy:
Game Pak
Input
Famicom:
NES:
Super NES:
Wii:
Wii Remote (horizontal)
Game Boy:
Serial code(s) Game Boy:
Japan DMG-CI-JPN

Yoshi's Cookie is a puzzle game, similar to Tetris, developed by Nintendo R&D 1 and published by Nintendo for the NES and Game Boy in 1992, and developed and published by Bullet-Proof Software for the SNES in 1993. Upon its release, Yoshi's Cookie received mixed to positive reviews. The Super Famicom received a re-release titled Yoshi no Cookie: Kuruppon Oven de Cookie with an added mode.

Additionally, a Japan-only remake for the Nintendo GameCube was included in Nintendo Puzzle Collection, where it was bundled alongside Dr. Mario 64 and Panel de Pon. The remake added a story mode the previous three versions lacked. Nintendo Puzzle Collection also offers the original Famicom version as a Game Boy Advance link transfer.

Yoshi's Cookie was later ported to the Wii's Virtual Console in 2008, but it was delisted from the service on October 2013 in all regions except South Korea. Eventually, the game was later delisted from South Korea in 2019 due to the closure of the Wii Shop Channel. Yoshi's Cookie was also originally planned to be released on the Wii U's Virtual Console, but this ultimately never happened.[10]

Gameplay[edit]

The objective of the game is to clear the stage of cookies, which appear from the top and the right of the screen. To clear cookies, the player needs an entire row of the same cookies (at least two) either horizontally or vertically. To move the cookies, the player has to press A Button/A Button/A Button on a cookie and press a direction on the directional pad. Depending on the direction the player presses, the row the cookie is on is then moved either vertically or horizontally. There are six types of cookies: heart cookies, flower cookies, diamond cookies, checkered cookies, circular cookies, and Yoshi Cookies (shaped like Yoshi's head). The Yoshi Cookie can be used as a substitute for other cookies, allowing the player to eliminate rows of cookies without the proper piece(s). The game consists of two modes: Action and VS. The third mode, Puzzle, is exclusive to the SNES version.

Action Mode[edit]

Gameplay screenshot of Yoshi's Cookie
Action Mode in the NES version

Action Mode or 1P is a game consisting of 10 rounds, with each round containing 10 stages. Before the game starts, the player can set the round which who wants to play in, the falling speed of the blocks and the music. The player must clear all of the blocks to clear a stage. As time passes, more cookies appear from the top and the right, which speeds up the longer the player is in a stage. If a row or column of cookies at any time contains more than seven cookies, the game is over.

After the player beats a round, they can view a short cutscene with Mario.

Clearing 15 cookies of one type in the same stage causes a Yoshi Cookie to generate, and that cookie's counter resets to zero.

Rounds 11-99 are also unlockable; within these rounds, the cookies are replaced by Mario enemies (except for the Yoshi Cookie), resembling the graphics from the original Yoshi game. These rounds also add Koopa Troopa shells; the Koopa tiles do not materialize from the corners of the screen, and as such, can only be eliminated via the Yoshi-shaped cookies. To access the later rounds in the NES and Game Boy versions (as revealed in the game's ending), the player must do the following:

  • Set the music type to "Off".
  • Set the speed to "Hi".
  • Set the round to "10"; then hold Up + Select to advance to round 11.

VS Mode[edit]

VS Mode is a simple 2 player game, with the player also able to challenge the computer in the SNES and Game Boy versions. The player starts off by picking one of four characters (except in the NES version): Mario, Princess, Yoshi, or Bowser. The GameCube version can be played with up to four players.

  • Mario is a balanced character.
  • Yoshi has stronger defenses against attacks, with the length of effects received from other players halved. The event shown appears for a longer time as Yoshi.
  • The Princess has weaker defenses, meaning that events received from other players will have a longer duration on the Princess. The event shown appears for a shorter time as the Princess.
  • Bowser has more powerful attacks, but the timer drains faster.

Each player has a 5×5 board. The goal of the game is to accumulate 25 points (with each match worth one point) before the opponent to win, although a handicap adjustment exists to start with more points. The player must make a match within the time limit, as allowing the time bar to fill up (or the fuse to run out) will result in a loss for the player.

The first player to win three rounds takes the match.

Aligning Yoshi Cookies will either benefit or harm the player. Depending on the special shown, the player should be careful not to penalize themselves.

List of Yoshi Cookie effects
  • Blind: The player is temporarily unable to see the middle nine tiles of their board.
  • Panic: The player's board is shuffled and cannot take action while the board is being shuffled.
  • Slave: The player temporarily loses control of their board as it is being controlled by the player who triggered it (copying exactly what the player is doing). Nothing happens if Slave targets themselves.
  • −3: Subtracts three points.
  • +3: Adds three points.
  • −7: Subtracts seven points.

Beating all four computer opponents in single-player mode in the SNES version of the game unlocks four more opponents, who appear as simple palette-swaps of the original four. They also have different attributes than the original four opponents. They are a green Mario similar to Fire Luigi, a red Yoshi, a light-blue Princess Peach, and a blue Bowser similar to Bowser's Brother.

Puzzle[edit]

Puzzle Mode

This mode appears only in the SNES version of the game. The objective of Puzzle Mode is to clear the field with a limited number of moves. The puzzles range from simple to complex. There are a total of 100 puzzles, with ten rounds of ten puzzles each. Each puzzle is associated with a password, allowing the player to continue where they left off by inputting it.

Staff[edit]

Main article: List of Yoshi's Cookie staff

The Game Boy and NES versions were developed by Nintendo R&D 1 and published by Nintendo, with Gunpei Yokoi acting as the producer.

The SNES version was developed and published by Bullet-Proof Software as they retained the rights for the SNES version and Nintendo licensed the characters and allowed them to use the "Yoshi's Cookie" Branding. Alexey Pajitnov, creator of Tetris, designed the puzzles.[11]

Cutscenes[edit]

The round completion cutscenes for Action Mode are as follows:

  • Round 1: Mario chases after a rolling ball (presumably cookie dough) and catches it, striking a pose.
  • Round 2: Mario chases after the rolling ball, only ends up rolling with the ball when grabbing on.
  • Round 3: Mario chases after the rolling ball, only to be humorously chased away by a larger bouncing ball (implied to be its parent)
  • Round 4: The ball bounces before hitting a wall, which then causes it to roll backwards into Mario (who was right behind it), knocking him over while the ball spins erratically.
  • Round 5: The ball spins erratically as Mario chases after it, only to end up eaten by Yoshi, to Mario's shock and Yoshi's amusement.
  • Round 6: Mario chases the ball down a slope, only to end up overtaking it in speed.
  • Round 7: The ball rolls then hits a wall and rolls back, with Mario proceeding to jump, only to end up squishing the ball.
  • Round 8: The ball falls down a ledge after rolling. Mario chases after it, only to find himself tripping due to unknowingly being on the ball, and the ball rolling away as Mario falls onto his back.
  • Round 9: The ball rolls to a cliffside as Mario chases after it, only for the ball to fall off the cliff, and ascend as an angel, with Mario looking sheepishly at the player.
  • Round 10: The ball is rolling and Mario and Yoshi, from opposite sides of the screen, proceed to grab it and then strike poses alongside the ball.

In the SNES version, the ball was revealed to be part of the Yoshi Cookie sign that fell off, and also has a slight animation of what occurs, and in the final one has Peach and Bowser joining the celebration during the credits.

Development[edit]

Yoshi's Cookie started as an arcade game named Hermetica (later renamed Archimedes)[12][dead link] developed by the company Home Data. This incarnation of the game featured alchemy-themed graphics.[12] The game received a very poor reception when it was location-tested at arcades in Kansai and Tarumi, causing Home Data to abandon further development and sell the rights to the game to Bullet-Proof Software.[12] Outside of answering design questions from designer Alexey Pajitnov, the creator of Hermetica had no involvement in the game's reworking as Yoshi's Cookie.[12]

It appears that, before Yoshi's Cookie began production, B.P.S. developed a generic version of "Hermetica" known as Inaro in 1991; a sample of this game was on the Blue Planet Software website in the 2000s.[13] Several home ports of Yoshi's Cookie feature copyright information referring to Inaro, namely the Wii Virtual Console version.[14]

Critical reception[edit]

Reviews
Release Reviewer, Publication Score Comment
Wii Marcel van Duyn, Nintendo Life 6/10 "Yoshi's Cookie is a decent puzzler that's a tad more original than puzzlers of a falling block nature, but we would suggest waiting for the SNES version to show up instead which, aside from improved audio and visuals that use sprites from Super Mario World, features more content via an added puzzle mode and amusing cutscenes."
Wii Lucas M.Thomas, IGN 6/10 "Overall, Yoshi's Cookie is a fair and favorable puzzler that – while not a candidate for immediate recommendation – wouldn't be a waste of your Wii Points should you decide to spend 500 of them on it. It's one of Nintendo's more obscure puzzle designs, and it sets itself apart in that it's not a clone of the "falling block" style of Tetris like so many other puzzlers are. Give it a look if you're a fan of the genre looking for something that's just a bit different."

Gallery[edit]

For this subject's image gallery, see Gallery:Yoshi's Cookie.

Media[edit]

For a complete list of media for this subject, see List of Yoshi's Cookie media.
Help:MediaHaving trouble playing?

References in other games[edit]

Names in other languages[edit]

Language Name Meaning Notes
Japanese ヨッシーのクッキー[?]
Yosshī no Kukkī
Yoshi's Cookie

Trivia[edit]

  • In the Family Computer/NES and Game Boy versions, there was a cutscene at the title screen where Mario would walk onto a screen with a jar of cookies. He would then try to open it, to no avail. He then gets an idea and walks off the screen. Yoshi comes up soon after and eats the jar whole. Mario then reappears with a hammer and begins chasing Yoshi off the screen. Later, he returns back on screen holding the cookie jar, which was empty to begin with. This, however, bears no influence on the game itself. This intro (slightly expanded to show Yoshi and Mario re-congregating and then striking a pose before walking off) was made for the SNES prototype of the game, but was taken out for the final release.
  • The backgrounds used in the SNES version resemble those from Super Mario World.
  • The Super Famicom and Super Nintendo Entertainment System version of Yoshi's Cookie featured a slightly-updated version of Yoshi's appearance, in which he has a bigger head, longer and more human-like arms and shorter neck. This appearance would be later used in Super Mario World 2: Yoshi's Island and later games. This game also marks the first time in-game that Yoshi's speech comprises of his name, a trait later used in Yoshi's Story and popularized by Super Smash Bros.
  • The title screen in the SNES version is a parody of the Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer logo.
  • Hello Kitty no Beads Kōbō (ハローキティのビーズ工房), a Japan-exclusive Game Boy Color game, is effectively a sequel to Yoshi's Cookie; however, it lacks any Super Mario elements. Its gameplay is derivative of the original game; the player must create lines of one specific type of tile, rather than clearing out all of the pieces. The copyright screen of the game states "©1992 Nintendo", referring to Yoshi no Cookie's release date.[15]

References[edit]

  1. ^ Yoshi's Cookie (NES). MobyGames.
  2. ^ Yoshi's Cookie (NES). MobyGames.
  3. ^ ヨッシーのクッキー. Nintendo Japan (Japanese).
  4. ^ Yoshi's Cookie (Game Boy). MobyGames.
  5. ^ Yoshi's Cookie (SNES). The Mushroom Kingdom. Retrieved May 31, 2024.
  6. ^ Yoshi's Cookie (SNES). MobyGames.
  7. ^ https://www.mariomuseum.com/archives/4805
  8. ^ https://www.mariomuseum.com/archives/4805
  9. ^ Yoshi's Cookie™ | Virtual Console (Wii) | Nintendo UK. Nintendo (British English). Retrieved November 13, 2024.
  10. ^ Nintendo of America (April 17, 2013). Nintendo eShop - Wii U Virtual Console Sizzle Reel. YouTube. Retrieved May 31, 2024.
  11. ^ April 1993. Nintendo Power Volume 47. Nintendo of America (American English). Page 109.
  12. ^ a b c d X thread (April 20, 2015), English translation posted here. Retrieved September 7, 2017
  13. ^ "Inaro". Blue Planet Software. Archived March 10, 2006, 18:59:17 UTC from the original via Wayback Machine. Retrieved May 31, 2024.
  14. ^ "INARO™ Game concept ©1991-2008 Intellectual Property Consultants, Inc., used, under license, by Nintendo." - Yoshi's Cookie, Virtual Console (digital manual)
  15. ^ "Puzzle Collection: Hello Kitty no Beads Koubou" on the Sanrio Wiki

External links[edit]