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Since Mappy wasn't extraordinarily popular in the U.S., there isn't a lot of history to report.  The name Mappy is likely derived from mappo, a Japanese slang term (slightly insulting) for a policeman.  The large red cat was known as Nyamco in Japan, which besides being a play on Namco, comes from nyanko, the Japanese equivalent of "kitty cat".  Nyamco was renamed Goro in the U.S. release.
Since Mappy wasn't extraordinarily popular in the U.S., there isn't a lot of history to report.  The name Mappy is likely derived from mappo, a Japanese slang term (slightly insulting) for a policeman.  The large red cat was known as Nyamco in Japan, which besides being a play on Namco, comes from nyanko, the Japanese equivalent of "kitty cat".  Nyamco was renamed Goro in the U.S. release.


Mappy (again, like Xevious) was ported to a large number of home computers and consoles in Japan, and (unlike Xevious) saw no American conversions.  It has only shown up recently in the states thanks to several of the [[Namco Museum]] compilations and the Jakks Pacific Namco TV Games plug & play systems.
Mappy (again, like Xevious) was ported to a large number of home computers and consoles in Japan, and (unlike Xevious) saw no American conversions.  It has shown up more recently in the states thanks to the [[Namco Museum 50th Anniversary]] compilations and the Jakks Pacific Namco TV Games plug & play systems.


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Revision as of 22:52, 7 November 2006

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Mappy marquee.png

Mappy, like Xevious, is an early Namco arcade game that achieved great success in the land of the rising sun, and very little success in the states. Behind it's cute characters and presentation is a surprisingly strategic arcade action game that requires a lot of planning, and can become quite frantic.

Since Mappy wasn't extraordinarily popular in the U.S., there isn't a lot of history to report. The name Mappy is likely derived from mappo, a Japanese slang term (slightly insulting) for a policeman. The large red cat was known as Nyamco in Japan, which besides being a play on Namco, comes from nyanko, the Japanese equivalent of "kitty cat". Nyamco was renamed Goro in the U.S. release.

Mappy (again, like Xevious) was ported to a large number of home computers and consoles in Japan, and (unlike Xevious) saw no American conversions. It has shown up more recently in the states thanks to the Namco Museum 50th Anniversary compilations and the Jakks Pacific Namco TV Games plug & play systems.

Story

You are Mappy, the brave mouse policeman. Mappy's mission is to retrieve all of the stolen treasure from the Meowky cat gang. They've stashed all of the loot in their leader's mansion which contains several floors, and numerous trampolines that the Meowkies like to use to travel between stories. Mappy's job is only to gather the goods, not to make any arrests, so don't let him get near any cats or it's lights out for Mappy.

How to play

Box artwork

Mappy has only been released in Japan on many different systems, and has accumulated a wide range of box artwork, some of which is displayed below.

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