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Swirl

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I recently stumbled across this video from 2014:
View: https://youtu.be/MeimELwWrMM


Apparently it's possible to run Puyo Puyo Tsu in four player mode, and I didn't even know this feature existed in the original arcade release. I went around searching and found someone asking how to enable this mode back in 2013, (it looks like they weren't able to figure out a solution on how the setup works): https://detail.chiebukuro.yahoo.co.jp/qa/question_detail/q10100231850

Has anyone else been able to fully replicate and document this whole setup on real hardware and/or MAME? I was under the impression you have to toggle one of the dipswitches on the C2 board to allow this communication to occur but there's probably a bunch of additional steps to this.
 
Oh wow! What an awesome find. I think it would be hard to find three other people down to play in 2024, but very cool nevertheless. Tsu is one of my favorite puzzle games ever, next to Puzzle Fighter and Puzzle Bobble 2X. My wife and I have definitely put triple digit hours into the Mega Drive version.

Edit: spelling
 
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Oh wow! What an awesome find. I think it would be hard to find three other people down to play in 2024, but very cool nevertheless. Tsu is one of my favorite puzzle games ever, next to Puzzle Fighter and Puzzle Bobble 2X. My wife and I have definitely put triple digit hours into the Mega Drive version.

Edit: spelling
Tsu is a very entertaining game to play and watch. I remember inviting a few folks over to run a session, and all I saw were quick matches going back and forth with giant chains. I'd imagine it'd be even more chaotic if you add an additional two players in the mix where everyone is frantically trying to control the offset like hot potato. :D

I'm aware in the SNES port you could run four players, but it's cool to see that this mode existed from the initial release. I was very surprised it hasn't been talked about or fully documented on how to set it all up.
 
Wow! What an incredible find!

I wonder how this was made possible! The video description mentions the use of optic fiber cable, but how tf did they plug that?

Puyo Puyo Tsuu still has a very vivid community, they sure would love to play that!
 
Wow! What an incredible find!

I wonder how this was made possible! The video description mentions the use of optic fiber cable, but how tf did they plug that?

Puyo Puyo Tsuu still has a very vivid community, they sure would love to play that!
I found this interview from 2015:
https://game.watch.impress.co.jp/docs/news/735475.html

It mentioned that another board is needed to facilitate the communication between two Puyo Puyo Tsu boards.

I searched around some more and found another website that mentioned the possible number of the communication sub board being "836-1118"; however, the web host isn't too sure.
https://usada.yabou.jp/game/acgame_sega.html

The only place that knows the board required would be the owner over at Technopolis. From the interview it sounds like they took a shot in the dark with an YJA listing and trial and error until they managed to establish the connection. I'm not too sure if asking the owner outright would be a good idea (?) Rather, I'm not even sure if they'd disclose that information on how the board functions, what it looks like, etc. to keep the place unique I guess.

I would hope someone else has this board somewhere in their pile of parts and could further document how this works or figure out how to reverse engineer the communication process. Otherwise we only have the stream VODs to work with, a screenshot of the communication process from "All About Puyo Puyo Tsu", and excerpt (from the same book on page 140) that talks about including the four player mode during the development.
 

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That's a good piece of information, with even a part number !

I can hardly imagine a single link board to be sufficent. The YT video description mentions the use of fiber optic cables, so my guess is you need 2 link boards: one plugged on each system (most certainly on CN4 connector); and both link boards need to be connected together with fiber optic cables.

Finding two boards would make this setup even harder to build.

If anyone else owns one of these, that's gotta be ShouTime.
 
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