It all started in the late 1980s and early 1990s. But it wasnât nearly as sexy. Game makers began releasing titles with 3D polygons, giving shape to what was previously flat. By 1994, Namco released Tekken, one of the first fighters with 3D polygons. Yet that was nothing compared to what Namco did two years later.
The game was Dancing Eyes, an arcade puzzle title that had players explode the clothes off a schoolgirl, an elevator lady, a female tennis player, a flight attendant and a nurse, what looks like an Anna Millerâs waitress, etc. It wasnât only undressing girls. Sometimes ladies were trapped in things, like a magicianâs assistant in a crate.
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Each section that was âcarved outâ would fly off, leaving that area exposed (see video). Once players carved out all the sections, theyâd be treated to a short scene in which they could move the camera around and zoom in.
The basic gameplay is similar to Taitoâs 1981 arcade title Qix, which had players fence off areas of a playing field.
While Namco billed the game as a âtotally new puzzle gameâ, Dancing Eyes is one of the many girl games that appeared in arcades after the Qix-based strip title Gals Panic stormed through arcades in 1990.
The rest of the 1990s saw increasingly explicit arcade games, with some featuring graphics with nudity, while some mahjong games have live action video footage of famous pin-ups mugging for the cameras. Nothing like being in an arcade filled with others and looking at smut!
Most of Dancing Eyes consisted of stripping clothes off of female characters, and great detail was paid to the type of underwear each lady wore. The game wasnât only about stripping (mostly, but not only). There were enemies, like pink bunnies and white mice, that chased your critter around, making it difficult to remove clothing sections.
The game never got a console release, perhaps due to its content. It was released in the days before Japanâs Computer Entertainment Rating Organization, so perhaps Sony was hesitant about putting it on the PlayStation.
Last October, Sony revealed a list of games that were coming to the PlayStation 3 with Move controls. On that list was a game from Namco called âDancing Eyesâ. Namco never showed any images of the game, leading to speculation about how similar it was going to be to the 1996 arcade original.
Iffy subject matter or not, the basic controls do lend themselves to the PlayStation Move in a unique and novel way. And if Namco mixed in the right about of silliness and sex, Dancing Eyes on the PS3 couldâve have been an interesting title.
Could have been, because even though the gameâs still listed on Sonyâs Move page, the latest reports out of Japan are that the game has been canceled.
Virtual ladies of Japan, your underpants sleep safely tonight.
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