Shiren 1 SFC:Prototype Content
Prototype Content of Template:GameTitle as seen in pre-release screenshots, videos and magazines.
Main Menu
The Main Menu background art of Table Mountain
- Shiren 1 SFC - Main Menu.png
Final.
Locations
Earlier Builds
Town
There are some screenshots of a town with a setting that looks similar to Mountaintop Town from Torneko's Great Adventure: Mystery Dungeon
. In another image of the same location, the building isn't seen. The game mechanics related to the restaurant in Mountaintop Town in the final game work similarly to Torneko's Shop in Torneko 1, which may explain why the building appears in one image and not another, although this is speculation, and it's just as likely that the two screenshots were taken from different builds of the game. This town is marked as Floor 1, suggesting it came before the forest dungeon floors.
Torneko 1 | Shiren 1 SFC Prototype |
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Dungeon
The earliest floors of the main dungeon were originally set in a forest dungeon area with rectangular rooms, called Lost Forest (Japanese: 迷いの森). A forest is present in the final build, however, the graphics are completely different and the rooms aren't rectangular. Mecharoid
In a 1994 interview, it was said that Kobami Valley
The game was developed in parallel with the Game Boy game Template:GameTitle., which used modified source code from the Super Famicom game.[1][2] While the final release of Shiren 1 SFC doesn't feature any rectangular forest locations, Moonlight Village GB does, and just like the Shiren 1 SFC prototype, it's the first area of the main dungeon. It's possible the GB game uses scrapped Shiren 1 SFC ideas or is based on an early version of Shiren 1 SFC.
Shiren 1 SFC - Lost Forest | Shiren 1 SFC - Mountaintop Forest |
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Shiren 1 SFC - Lost Forest | Moonlight Village GB |
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Later floors are also significantly different from the released game, and only use rectangular rooms. It is possible that the Fifth Dungeon is what remains of this prototype dungeon due to the similar monster spawns.
Jizo Valley
Later Builds
The dungeon looks like Table Mountain
Shiren 1 SFC Later Prototype - Mountain Stream | Shiren 1 SFC - Mountain Stream |
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Characters
In a video of a later build:
- In what looks like a prototype Canyon Hamlet
, a character called Master(Japanese: マスター) asks Shiren for his name. The player could select from a menu whether or not to say it.
- A lost boy character on the first floor who is looking for his parents and he follows Shiren. He may have eventually become Surala
.
Items and Traps
- Rice Balls were initially Bread, like in Torneko 1. Scrolls and Armbands also still used sprites from that game.
- There was a trap that turned Shiren into bread, which has no equivalent in the released game.
- There was an item called Jar of Increase
(Japanese: 増加の壺), which may have been a counterpart to the Jar of Division
(Japanese: 分裂の壺).
- Items called Sword of Amteca
(Japanese: アムテカの剣) and Shield of Amteca
(Japanese: アムテカの盾) are seen in a magazine[3].
- These may have been cut versions of the Golden Blade and Gold Shield respectively, which were added to the Nintendo DS release.
- Amteca
is known as the City of Gold, thus the connection.
- Scrolls and armbands had different sprites.
- A later build that is much closer to the final version also has its own sprite for armbands, different both from the early sprite that resembles Torneko 1, and from the final version.
Monsters
Instead of Soldier Ants (Japanese: 軍隊アリ), which walk in a group and block the way in rooms by forming a wall[4]. Despite showing their digging behavior, the Character Debut Book makes a reference to their original behavior.[5]. Fay's Puzzle 001
in Moonlight Village GB features a similar situation, where the player needs to walk in a corridor to get past a wall of monsters.
Names
- Fluffy Bunny
(Japanese: いやしウサギ) was referred to as Carbuncle(Japanese: カーバンクル) during development, the name of the legendary animal it is inspired by.
- Sheriff
(Japanese: 盗賊番) was referred to as Police Officer(Japanese: 警官).
- Guard Dog
(Japanese: 番犬) was referred to as Police Dog(Japanese: 警察犬).
- Death Reaper
(Japanese: 死の使い) was referred to as Death Ghost(Japanese: デスゴースト).
- Bufu's Cleaver
(Japanese: ブフーの包丁) was referred to as Oni Knife(Japanese: 鬼包丁).
- Herb of Sight
(Japanese: めぐすり草) was spelled in kanji only (Japanese: 目薬草), like in Torneko 1. - Gitan
(Japanese: ギタン) was referred to as Gold(Japanese: ゴールド), a name used in Torneko 1.
Shops
- Menus for items in shops were slightly different.
- A different type of in-dungeon shop, called Grab and Go Store
(Japanese: つかみ取りの店) is seen in a magazine. Unlike normal shops, the player has 10 turns to grab items in a room full of traps. It requires 1,000 Gitan per attempt.
Gallery
Promotional Flyers
Videos
Later Build |
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See Also
Debug Mode • Debug Room • Items • Monsters • Monster Spawns • Prototype Content • Miscellaneous Unused Content |
References
- ↑ https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mystery_Dungeon:_Shiren_the_Wanderer
- ↑ The Untold History of Japanese Game Developers. Vol. 2. P. 592 ISBN 9781518655319
- ↑ 電撃スーパーファミコン 1995年2月24日号 No.3
- ↑ ファミコン通信(1995年1月6・13合併号)
- ↑ Mystery Dungeon 2: Shiren the Wanderer Character Debut Book P. 50 ISBN: 978-4924978034
- ↑ https://seesaawiki.jp/shiren1/d/%CB%D7%A5%C7%A1%BC%A5%BF Unused content in Shiren 1 SFC on the SFC シレンwiki.
- ↑ http://milutkalik.blog31.fc2.com/blog-entry-258.html
- ↑ https://wata300.hatenadiary.org/entry/20070120/p1
- ↑ https://blog.goo.ne.jp/6-912/e/04dfa2da676993151031f8abc794f413