Splatoon

Splatoon is a third-person shooter video game franchise developed and published by Nintendo. The series centers around fictional, anthropomorphic, cephalopodic characters called Inklings or Octolings, based off squids and octopi respectively, that can transform between humanoid and cephalopod forms at will, and frequently engage in turf wars with each other. To achieve their goals, they can use a variety of weapons that produce and shoot colored ink while in humanoid form, or swim and hide in surfaces covered in their own colored ink while in cephalopodic form.

Splatoon
Genre(s)Third-person shooter
Developer(s)Nintendo EAD
Nintendo EPD
Publisher(s)Nintendo
Composer(s)Toru Minegishi
Platform(s)Wii U
Nintendo Switch
First releaseSplatoon
28 May 2015
Latest releaseSplatoon 2
21 July 2017

The first game in the series, Splatoon, was released for the Wii U in May 2015 .[1] Its sequel, Splatoon 2, was released for the Nintendo Switch in July 2017,[2] followed by its expansion pack, Octo Expansion, in June 2018.[3] The series also has received positive reviews for its style, gameplay mechanics and soundtrack, with both entries in the series having been nominated and awarded in several year-end accolades from various gaming publications. The series has sold over 15 million copies.

Splatoon has spawned numerous collaborations with third-party companies and had established its own esports tournament circuit in 2018.[4][5] The series has running manga series,[6] an anime adaptation,[7][8] as well as music concerts in Japan.[9]

Games

Splatoon

Splatoon was developed for the Wii U by a team at Nintendo Entertainment Analysis & Development in 2013. It originally consisted of a four-versus-four ink-based territory control game set in a featureless arena.[10] The game was subsequently developed to incorporate squid-like creatures, now called Inklings, which could switch between human and squid forms in order to be able to hold weapons as a human, while being able to hide or swim through ink as a squid.[11] In 2014, Splatoon was revealed during a Nintendo Direct video presentation at E3 2014, and a playable demo version was made available at the show floor.[12] Subsequently, a time-limited multiplayer demo, the "Global Testfire", was made available on 8, 9 and 23 May 2015.[13] The full game was released globally between 28 and 30 May 2015, which included a single-player story campaign mode and an online multiplayer mode.

Splatoon 2

Splatoon 2 was developed by for the Nintendo Switch by Nintendo Entertainment Planning & Development, and was announced in January 2017.[14] The setting of the game takes place approximately two years after the events of the final Splatfest in Splatoon, an in-game festival event in which players voted for one of the two protagonists, the Squid Sisters, and fought it out by playing a series of turf war matches. It was later revealed that the results of the Splatfest directly influenced the story of Splatoon 2.[15][16]

Unlike its predecessor which was played on the Wii U, Splatoon 2 featured a reworked user interface due to the lack of a gamepad, and added new maps, weapons and abilities into play.[17] A new player versus environment mode known as "Salmon Run" was introduced,[18][19] together with a new competitive multiplayer mode called "Clam Blitz".[20]

In March 2017, a "Splatoon 2 Global Testfire" event was made available.[21] A second demo which featured the in-game festival Splatfest was released on 15 July 2017.[22] The full game was subsequently released on 21 July 2017.[2] A companion mobile app known as SplatNet 2 (hosted by the Nintendo Switch Online mobile app) was released to allow players to view their in-game statistics and communicate with other players through voice chat.[23]

In March 2018, Nintendo announced Splatoon 2: Octo Expansion in a Nintendo Direct video, the first paid downloadable content (DLC) expansion,[24] which featured a harder, new, single-player story campaign and a different, playable race of cephalopod known as Octolings.[25][26] The DLC was subsequently made available globally on 13 June 2018.

Splatfests

"Splatfests" are special, monthly recurring in-game festival events that take place in Splatoon and Splatoon 2, where players are asked a binary question and take sides based on the answer that they chose. For example, players could be asked to pick between mayonnaise or ketchup,[27] or if they prefer using a fork or a spoon.[28] The players play a series of turf war matches and contribute scores to the side they have picked. A scoring system decides the winning side based on the overall score of everyone who played.

Due to the polarizing nature of the choices offered during Splatfests, the themes themselves tend to be the subject of media attention. The themes range from preference questionnaires (e.g. cats vs. dogs,[29] arts vs. sciences)[30], to paradoxes (e.g. chicken or the egg)[31], or sometimes be part of a real-life corporate partnership or sponsorship with Nintendo. Examples of these are the Transformers-themed Splatfest with Hasbro,[32] the Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles and SpongeBob SquarePants-themed ones with Nickelodeon,[33][34] or one with McDonald's.[35]

In most of these Splatfests, the outcome tends to only affect the player's level of in-game reward at the end of the event[36] and have no significance to the overall playability of the game. However, the exception to this is the last Splatfest of each game, which typically marks the end of developer support for the game.[37][38][39][40] It was revealed that the outcome of the last Splatfest in Splatoon affected the story of Splatoon 2, in which the losing protagonist Callie became an antagonist in the next game.[15][16][41][42] On 24 December 2019, 'Splatoon 3' became trending on Twitter following the release of an artwork that excluded the protagonist Marina, as she was believed to be missing in the same way as Callie in Splatoon following her loss in the final Splatfest of Splatoon 2.[43][44][45][46]

Other media

Between January 2016 and March 2017, two webcomic series based on Splatoon was launched in Enterbrain's Weekly Famitsu magazine: "Honobono Ika 4koma" illustrated by Kino Takahashi, and "Play Manga" by various doujin writers.[47][48][49] The comics were published by Kadokawa Future Publishing on 15 June 2017.[50]

A Splatoon manga series illustrated by Sankichi Hinodeya began serialization in Shogakukan's CoroCoro Comic magazine on February 2016, following a one-shot published in CoroCoro Comic in May 2015.[51][52] The licencing rights to publish the manga in North America was then later acquired by Viz Media in 2017.[53][54] Within the same year in July, a motion comic adaptation of the manga was announced and then released on CoroCoro's YouTube channel the following month.[55][56] As of February 2018, the manga has over 800,000 copies in print and the series is currently ongoing.[51]

In April 2017, a manga series illustrated by Hideki Goto titled "Splatoon: Squid Kids Comedy Show" was published in Bessatsu CoroCoro Comic.[57] It was also later acquired by Viz Media and is slated for publication in North America in 2020.[58][59][60]

Music

In the story of Splatoon, the game's protagonists, the Squid Sisters and Off The Hook are fictional popstars characters which create and perform the music as heard within the game. As a result, a series of real-life virtual concerts featuring holograms of the game's protagonists have been held at various locations.

In 2016, a concert tour known as "Squid Sisters Live" was held commemorating the sale of 1 million copies of Splatoon.[61] The concerts have taken place at Niconico Tokaigi, Chokaigi and Niconico Cho Party in Japan, and the Japan Expo in Paris.[62][63][64] Similarly, concert tours featuring Splatoon 2's Off the Hook was held months after the game release since 2018.[65][66][67] Recordings from the concerts have been made into CD albums.[68][69][70]

Esports

Due to the availability of competitive game modes in Splatoon, competitive Esports tournaments with sponsored prizing have been held as early as 2016 in Japan.[71]

With the release of Splatoon 2, Nintendo established the Splatoon 2 World Championships and began hosting competitive tournaments in 2018.[5][72] Teams of 4 can compete in a series of online qualifiers or live tournaments to earn invitations to play at the World Championships, which is played at the Nintendo World Championships alongside other Nintendo games such as Super Smash Bros. and Super Mario Maker 2.[73] The event is typically held during Nintendo's E3 event and livestreamed.[74][75][76]

Reception

Sales and aggregate review scores
As of May 7, 2020.
Game Year Copies sold
(in millions)
Metacritic
Splatoon 2015 4.95[77] Wii U: 81[78]
Splatoon 2 2017 10.13[79] NS (Base Game): 83[80]
NS (Octo Expansion): 82[81]

Splatoon is generally well-received and praised as a series, and is often credited as a successful reinvention of the third-person shooter genre.[82][83][84][85][86] Both games in the series have been nominated and won numerous year-end awards from various gaming publications.

Legacy

Characters from Splatoon such as the Inklings have appeared in other Nintendo games, such as Super Mario Maker on the Wii U, and Mario Kart 8 Deluxe and Super Smash Bros. Ultimate on the Nintendo Switch. In Super Smash Bros. Ultimate, Splatoon is represented by playable stage Moray Towers, 26 music tracks, and an Assist Trophy based on the Squid Sisters.[87] A crossover event between Splatoon 2 and Animal Crossing: Pocket Camp occurred in September 2018.[88] In July 2019, a Splatoon 2 theme was made playable in Tetris 99 to commemorate Splatoon 2's final Splatfest on 18 July 2019.[89][90][91]

The NES Zapper, which appears in the game as a usable weapon,[92][93] has become a popular collectible item following its inclusion in the Splatoon games.[94][95]

Water guns modeled after the weapons that appear in game were sold as toys.[96][97][98]

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