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| Densetsu no Starfy 3 | |
|---|---|
| Developer | Tose[a] |
| Publisher | Nintendo |
| Directors | Akio Imai Azusa Tajima |
| Producers | Yasuhiro Minamimoto Hitoshi Yamagami |
| Designer | Koutarou Shinoki |
| Programmers | Satoshi Nakajima Kouichi Kitano |
| Artist | Yasuko Takahashi |
| Composer | Morihiro Iwamoto |
| Platform | Game Boy Advance |
| Release |
|
| Genre | Platform |
| Modes | Single-player,multiplayer (minigames only) |
Densetsu no Starfy 3[b] is aplatformingvideo game developed byTose and published byNintendo for theGame Boy Advance only inJapan on August 5, 2004. It is the third game inThe Legendary Starfy series, as well as the third and last title of the series developed and released for the Game Boy Advance. Later, its sequel,Densetsu no Starfy 4, was developed for theNintendo DS. It received its first official re-release on theNintendo Classics service on July 12, 2024, in all regions for the first time along with the other GBA entries.[1]
In the beginning, a short time afterDensetsu no Starfy 2's storyline, everything is calm, and everyone, including the protagonist Stafy, known as Starfy in Western regions, is happy again, until another severethunderstorm comes and shakes Pufftop Palace. This time, it is more severe than the ones in the past. A lightning bolt strikes the Magic Jar and destroys it, and the antagonist of the previous titles, Ogura, is freed once again. He later flies away from Pufftop Palace, leaving everyone else wondering what he was leaving for. Starfy's father tells Starfy andMoe that it falls to them to stop Ogura for a third time. Moe becomes angry and refused, because he is bored of doing the same things they did in the past. Later, Starfy's sister,Starly, jumps and bounces on Moe, and introduces herself to him. She later pushes him and her brother off the edge of Pufftop Palace and jumps down with them to pursue Ogura.

Like its predecessors,Densetsu no Starfy 3 plays very much like other platforming games, such as someSuper Mario Bros. titles and someKirby titles, but it's mostly about swimming around stages, which makes this series' official game genre amarine platform. In fact, the colorful graphics and level layouts (as well as the look of Stafy) have drawn many comparisons to the Kirby series. Stafy himself can run, jump, and attack via spinning; he also gains access to various transportation objects and animal familiars as the games progress. LikeDensetsu no Starfy 2 and unlikethe first title of the series,Densetsu no Starfy 3 usually has a certain number of stages per area, with each stage split up into four sub-stages. Most of the other stages' goals are centered around retrieving a lost or stolen item for another character, includingWario.[2] There are many items to collect and many enemies to defeat. The player can move Starfy on land by running and jumping, but when Starfy is in watery areas, he can move much more freely, push obstacles, and so on. Like the previous games, this game also includes minigames, except all of them are different compared to the ones that are similar toAtari'sBreakout.
After the release ofDensetsu no Starfy 2, Nintendo and Tose immediately moved on to developDensetsu no Starfy 3. The game was developed in less than a year, and included some features that the previous games didn't have, such asmultiplayer minigames. However, like its predecessors, Nintendo and TOSE aired animatedtelevision commercials forDensetsu no Starfy 3, as well as releasing some promotional merchandise.Perfume, aJ-Pop group, recorded and played their own version ofThe Legendary Starfy main theme during the credits of a Japanese television show,Oha-Sta. Despite that being made, it wasn't released in retail stores.
Densetsu no Starfy 3 was the second best-selling game in Japan during its week of release, at 42,000 copies.[3] By the end of 2004, the game sold a total of 212,946 copies in the country.[4] Japanese gaming publicationFamitsu gave the game a total score of 31 out of 40. In 2009,Nintendo Life gave the game a score of 10 out of 10 and called it "one of the best platformers ever created".[5] In 2023,Time Extension included the game on their list of "Best GBA Games of All Time".[6]