Drill Dozer
- Use the Drill Dozer to plow owing to everything in your path and make your way owing to the game.
- Explore every inch of the world in search of hidden gears that will make your Drill Dozer even more powerful.
- Rumble pack will give it a right drilling sensation.
- Jump across chasms, bore owing to blocks, and latch onto lifts to reach secret treasures.
- Battle huge bosses with drill on drill action.
Product Description
Drill Dozer gives you the chance to break some skulls! An evil crime syndicate has stolen a red diamond that belonged to your deceased mother. Now it’s up to you and your fellow thieves to penetrate their hideout and take it back. With the help of your trusty Breakall Drillbot, you’ll plow owing to just about anything in your path.
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Go ahead! Make all the asinine sex jokes you can come up with, ’cause when your daddy’s in the hospital after getting the living daylights beaten out of him by a rivial gang, you’ll be glad you’re wearing a sexy tutu with fire-engine-red pumps… er, I mean, you’ll be glad you have a compact car with legs and an over-sized drill!
As it says on the box, the cartrige vibrates. What the box doesn’t tell you is that you can also play the game on the Game Boy Player and make your GameCube controller rumble. For even more fun, plug a rumble-enabled controller (not a Hori or WaveBird) into port 1 of your GameCube, play the game using any GC-compatible controller plugged into port 2, and the place port 1’s controller on your lap.
The L & R buttons potential the drill to turn it left or right. Not as in stearing your vehicle clockwise or counter-clockwise, but like a drill going in forward or reverse. Most of the time it doesn’t matter which way the drill is spinning unless you’re trying to open a door, drilling screws, jumping backwards, or fighting a boss that requires certain patterns of attack.
The A button is for jumping (or sliding if DOWN is held on the cross pad).
The B button is for scouting and reading signs. I wish it was for attacking, but it’s not. Jill does look cute when she pops up like a curious puppy from a box.
The Start button pasues the game and the Brilliant button brings up the menu.
The controls are a small frustrating at first, but you should adapt quickly.
*Yes, the intro is based on an ad I saw from Keio Flying Squadron for Sega CD! Pleased now?!!
Rating: 4 / 5
If you like a game with android skeletons and amother tale of a mom being dead this is for you, Is it just me or in every danm tale for kids the mom has to die. Jeez anyway have fun drilling everything you ever wanted to drill like statues and policemen and robots.
Rating: 4 / 5
This has got to be one of the best sports meeting I have bought in a long time. Prepare to get your reflexes going, because this game is going to use them. You control a girl thief by the name of Jill. She uses a ‘Drill Dozer’ to attack the Skullker gang in hopes of retrieving the Red Diamond. A gem her late mother passed down to her. So fasten your seatbelts and lubricate those military exercises and gears, because once you start this game you won’t want to place it down. Get ready for one of the cutest, most innovative sports meeting to hit the GBA in a long time.
Rating: 5 / 5
This was one of those GBA sports meeting I missed due to lack of advertisement for it. I read reviews recently and chose to get it. Although I have not beaten it, I can pretty much gather how the game will go. It’s a 2D side scroller with excellent graphics (for GBA) excellent sound, and fun gameplay. Oh, and it rumbles…if that means anything to you. If you like 2D platformers like Mario or Wario , you’ll like this.
Rating: 4 / 5
Game Freak, best known for their Pokemon franchise, made a Game Boy Advance gem known as Drill Dozer last February. It went largely unobserved in the sea of new Nintendo DS titles, which is unfortunate, because Drill Dozer delivered a fun action-platform experience that relied on one go: drilling.
The Skuller gang stole the Red Diamond from the real gang of thieves, the Red Dozers. Jill and her Red Dozer comrades have to find a way to steal back the Red Diamond, but they learn there are more diamonds to be found. So what is a gang of thieves to do? Steal more diamonds! Using the Red Dozers’ trusty Drill Dozer, you’ll spin Jill owing to twelve stages on a fun adventure to track down five different diamonds.
If it wasn’t already obvious, the Drill Dozer is really the star of the show and the focal point of the gameplay. As a side-scrolling action-platform game, Drill Dozer has unadorned hop-and-bop gameplay without the drilling factor-but using the L and R buttons on the GBA allows you to spin the Drill Dozer’s drill to the left or right. You can bore the drill into all sorts of things, like parapet, crates, environmental objects and set pieces, and even enemies-needless to say, you’ll be holding down L or R a lot in this adventure. The gameplay is made deeper by multiple “gears” that can be found in each level. When you find your second gear (the first is always installed into the Drill Dozer), you can shift up and increase the alacrity and potential of the drill, though the drill still needs to recover after a few moments of spinning. The third gear is the strongest gear and keeps your drill spinning quickly indefinitely. Unfortunately, at the end of each level, the Drill Dozer’s gears have to be removed, so each new level you’ll start with that unadorned first gear.
Collecting the different gears in each level is a lot of fun, and the level designers have made some excellent maps for the special things you can do with the drill. For example, there are lifts that have a socket that the drill can bore into, so Jill can ride up to higher platforms. There are special “jelly blocks” that Jill can drill into, and when she reverses the management of the drill (by critical the contrary trigger button), she will be sent flying backward. Learning all the things that the drill can be used for is the only way to master Drill Dozer. Even the game’s larger enemies require you to drill in certain ways, for example, there is a mini-boss robot character held together by a huge screw. Only by unscrewing the mini-boss’s robot will you defeat it, and drilling in one management in fact tightens the screw, so you have to figure out which way to drill to succeed. It’s a unadorned concept that is played out very well.
The Game Boy Advance’s visual capabilities were tested well with Drill Dozer, which features huge, bright, colorful sprites and all sorts of flashy tale sequences between levels. Game Freak did a wonderful job making cute, perky characters, and the Red Dozers as well as their enemies are spunky and full of charm. The levels are loaded with detail, and it’s nice that the game in fact questions you to pay attention to the social class: in the museum level, there are several unadorned puzzles that require you to go around paintings found in the social class. You are kindly mandatory to notice the social class, and it’s a nice way to appreciate the game’s visuals even more.
Drill Dozer isn’t a long game by any means. The twelve levels can be breezed owing to in a few small hours, but there is some replay regard to be found. There are dozens of “treasures” located throughout the adventure in places that you normally couldn’t reach. Near the end of the game you are able to buy stronger military exercises that break into blocks that previously obstructed your path-obviously, these blocked-off areas are home to special items, so re-playing the levels is necessary if you desire 100% completion of the game. Some would reflect that this was a cheap way to make you backtrack, but I found it to be a nice way of fleshing out all of the levels, rather than only the later ones. There are also six secret areas in the game to explore.
Drill Dozer makes a splendid addition to any Game Boy Advance library. The only flaw I can fathom, other than the slightly small length of the game, would be the drill sound effect. It works, and it works well, but it is done so much that it is closer to irritating than realistic after some time. Drill Dozer’s unadorned mechanics are accessible to anyone. Don’t be turned away by the cute graphics or box art-it’s a fun game that uses a release concept very well, well enough to be done repeatedly for twelve levels and more. To me, that’s impressive. Most sports meeting that question you to do the same thing over and over for more than a few minutes get pretty dull, but this drill is always sharp.
Rating: 4 / 5