Wikipedia:

Jazz Jackrabbit

(computer game)
Jazz Jackrabbit
Jazz_Jackrabbit_titlescreen.screenshot.png
Developer(s) Epic MegaGames
Publisher(s) Epic MegaGames
Designer(s) Cliff Bleszinski
Series Jazz Jackrabbit
Release date(s) 3 May 1994
Genre(s) Side-scrolling platform game
Mode(s) Single player
Platform(s) MS-DOS
Media Floppy disk/CD-ROM
System requirements 386 Computer (486 or higher recommended)
Input Keyboard, Joystick

Jazz Jackrabbit is a platform game produced by Epic MegaGames (currently known as Epic Games). It was released in 1994 for the PC. In 2002 the game was updated for the Game Boy Advance.

Jazz Jackrabbit was created by Cliff Bleszinski and Arjan Brussee, and inspired by classic console games such as Super Mario Bros., Mega Man, and especially the fast-paced Sonic the Hedgehog. As a result, its console-style vibrant graphics and speedy gameplay made it somewhat novel as a PC game. PC Format magazine named Jazz Jackrabbit "Arcade Game of the Year", and it was popular enough to have a sequel, Jazz Jackrabbit 2, released in 1998.

Storyline

Three thousand years after the events of Aesop's "The Tortoise and the Hare", the enmity between tortoises and hares continues. Jazz Jackrabbit visits various planets to save Princess Eva Earlong and the rabbits' homeworld, Carrotus, from the megalomaniacal Devan Shell and his army of Turtle Terrorists.

Gameplay

Jazz Jackrabbit is similar in gameplay to the Sonic the Hedgehog games. The game features six episodes; each episode consists of three worlds, with two levels and one 3D bonus level (reached by finding a special gem hidden in one of two standard levels) per world, and finally a boss level. Unlike Sonic, Jazz has a life bar: when enemies shoot or come in contact with him, he loses health that must be replenished by collecting carrots. If his health falls to zero, Jazz turns to ash and the level restarts from the last checkpoint. Also, instead of jumping on enemies(which would only result in Jazz losing health) Jazz must shoot his enemies with a blue gun he always carries. A variety of different bullet types can be found in the game and do varying amounts of damage.

Originally, the game was sold on floppy disks; one could purchase the first three episodes, the final three episodes, or all six at once. A special CD-ROM version was later released that contained all six original episodes, three completely new episodes, and the 1994 Christmas edition (retitled Holiday Hare).

Shareware releases

Jazz Jackrabbit has a shareware release that contains the first episode. In December 1994, Holiday Hare, a Christmas episode, was released. This standalone game could be played without downloading the first shareware release. In 1995, a second Holiday Hare with all-new worlds was released; like the previous Christmas game, it was also standalone.

Game Boy Advance

Game Titan developed an all new version of Jazz Jackrabbit for Nintendo's Game Boy Advance system. The game was published by Jaleco in the US on November 19, 2002. There are 24 singleplayer levels and 11 multiplayer levels. The game features multi-boot multiplayer for up to four players which allows multiplay with only one cartridge.

Other releases

OpenJazz is a game engine recreation for Jazz Jackrabbit created by Alister Thomson. Work was started on August 23, 2005, made public on November 28 of the same year, and had its source code released on Christmas Day. It is available for Linux and Microsoft Windows, and there are ports to the Dreamcast, the GP2X, the GP32, the PlayStation Portable, and Windows Mobile based pocket PC/PDA devices.

JCS'94 is a Level editor for Jazz Jackrabbit. It was started more than two years before the OpenJazz project. Its latest proposed release date was November 2005.[citation needed] The makers of JCS'94 helped resolve some issues in the development of OpenJazz.

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