R.O.B.
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- For other uses, see R.O.B. (disambiguation).
Image:Robotic Operating Buddy.jpg R.O.B. (Robotic Operating Buddy) was an accessory for the Nintendo Entertainment System. It was released in 1984 in Japan as the "Famicom Robot" and in 1985 as R.O.B in North America.
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Operation
The R.O.B. functions by receiving commands via optical flashes from a television screen. With the head pointed always at the screen, the arms move left, right, up, and down, and the hands pinch together and separate to manipulate objects on fixtures attached to the base.
Gamers without experience might wonder how R.O.B. relays data back to the NES, and in fact there is no direct way to do so. In Gyromite, one of R.O.B.'s base attachments holds and pushes buttons on an ordinary controller. In Stack-Up the player is supposed to press a button on his or her own controller to indicate when R.O.B. completes a task. While the Robot Series games were among the most complex of its time, they were reliant upon the honor system.
Specifications
- Height: 24cm/9.5in
- Arm movement range: 300° left/right (five stopping points), 7cm/2.75in up/down (six stopping points, Gyromite uses only the 1st, 3rd, and 5th from the top), 7cm/2.75in between hands when open. Though R.O.B. is mostly receptive to unpowered manipulation, the rotational axis should only be operated electrically.
- Head movement range: 45° tilt, horizontally centered. This joint is one of the most commonly broken areas on pre-owned R.O.B.s.
- Five accessory slots around the hexagonal base (numbered clockwise, starting at the left rear) and notches on the hands allow for specialized parts to be attached depending on the game.
- Red LED on top of head confirms reception of signals from television.
- Runs on 4 AA batteries.
- Optional tinted filter could be attached over the eyes to compensate for use with overly bright televisions.
- The original "Famicom Robot" was white with red arms to match the Famicom; R.O.B. was colored in two shades of gray to match the NES.
Compatible games
History
Image:Stack Up ROB.jpg In Japan, the Famicom Robot was sold with Robot Block (a.k.a. Stack-Up).
The Robotic Operating Buddy was sold in two packages. One was the NES Deluxe Set, which featured a control deck, the NES Zapper, two controllers, and two games (Duck Hunt and Gyromite). The other package only included R.O.B. and Gyromite.
While in production, R.O.B. was not widely accepted. The reason why it is not exceedingly rare today is due to its brief inclusion in the attractive and early NES Deluxe Set. It was compatible with only two games, neither of which were simple enough for a game market that, at the time, was composed almost entirely of younger children.
Its most successful use was as a "trojan horse" to garner interest following the video game crash of 1983. Retailers, reluctant to stock video games, were successfully tricked when Nintendo snuck the NES in with R.O.B. as a "robot toy" instead of a video game. It worked, as retailers stocked the NES, and Nintendo was on its way to becoming a video game giant.
On the other hand, most consumers saw R.O.B. only as a novelty. The slow pace with which R.O.B. performed its movements was a source of frustration, since cheating at Gyromite was far easier to set up and play than controlling the game in its intended fashion. In fact, many people did not understand how the accessory worked. These perceptions, along with a high price tag, led Nintendo to exclude R.O.B. from further bundles and discontinue it after only two years on store shelves.
Appearances
Cameos
- The first known cameo was in StarTropics, where a submarine has a navigational robot named Nav-Com that resembles R.O.B.
- The Game Boy Camera contains a secret image of R.O.B., unlocked in the B album after scoring 500 points in the "Ball" minigame.
- Kirby's Dreamland 3 features R.O.B. as well as Professor Hector from Gyromite and Stack-Up. The player brings two arms, a body and a head to Professor Hector, who assembles them and gives the player a heart star.
- ROB 64 of Star Fox 64 is named after R.O.B. As the pilot of the Great Fox (much like Nav-Com from StarTropics), he brings powerups, vehicles and cover fire into the field. His name was shortened to ROB in later Star Fox games. Also in Star Fox 64, Spyborg, the boss of the Sector X level resembles R.O.B., and derives its Japanese name from Famicom Robot's serial number.
- In the Port Town levels of F-Zero GX and F-Zero AX, a giant construction robot that looks like R.O.B. in Famicom colors can be seen in the background.
- R.O.B. appears throughout the Wario Ware, Inc. series, in some of 9-Volt's character movies and "classic" genre microgames.
- In Pikmin 2, near-perfect models of R.O.B.'s head (named "Remembered Old Buddy") and the 5 Stack-Up blocks (erroneously named "Gyro Blocks") are treasures that players can find in the game.
- In Animal Crossing: Wild World, the "Robo" furniture series is an homage to R.O.B. It includes a lamp, a bed, a couch, a chair, a clock and other items with R.O.B.-like details.
- Tetris DS does not feature R.O.B., but there is an appearance by Professor Hector of Gyromite and Stack-Up. He walks back and forth on the top screen of the main menu.
- Chibi-Robo features an oversized robot named Giga-Robo whose head resembles R.O.B.'s. Also, Giga-Robo was shut down and put away, presumably never to be seen again. This mirrors R.O.B.'s somewhat unappreciated status.
Mario Kart DS
R.O.B made his reappearance in Mario Kart DS. In this game, R.O.B. is a playable character, unlocked after finishing one of the two Mirror classes (either Nitro or Retro) with Gold Trophies on all four cups. He is one of the two heaviest characters in the game (Bowser is the other joint-heavyweight).
R.O.B.'s personal icon, seen on any kart he drives (in the absence of a user-created icon), is an image of an NES D-pad. A victory image depicting him with the other characters shows R.O.B. towering over the other racers, but in play he is average in size. During online Nintendo Wi-Fi Connection play, the original Famicom/NES difference is preserved; Japanese players will race a white Famicom Robot, while North American and European players will use a grey R.O.B.
R.O.B. has two unique karts, the ROB-BLS and the ROB-LGS. Both are very fast and heavy but have wider handling. The ROB-BLS kart is an adaptation of R.O.B.'s base equipped with the Stack-Up accessory set, a steering wheel and four very small tires. The ROB-LGS is a tall set of stylistically matched legs with one large tire in back and two small tires in front.
R.O.B. is the fourth non-Mario character to appear in a Mario Kart game; the first three were Pac-Man, Ms. Pac-Man, and Blinky in Mario Kart Arcade GP.
Popular culture
- Nintendo Power magazine devoted an entire article to R.O.B. in its 10th anniversary issue. With tongue in cheek, they related that, in 1985, he had been stricken with wanderlust, resigned from the company, and went off to wander the world. In the intervening years he had gone to Antarctica, attended the Berlin Wall's destruction, acted as the T-1000's stunt double in Terminator 2: Judgment Day, worked for NASA, and became the first robot on the moon (the mission was top-secret, of course). By 1995, he had moved to the Midwest, married, settled down, and started a family.
- In the style of "Where Are They Now?", X-Play humorously described his descent into a world of robot sex and drug addiction after being ignored by the gaming public.
- In GameSpy's Top 25 Smartest Moves in Gaming History, Nintendo's decision to use R.O.B. as a "trojan horse" to convince retailers to stock the NES was chosen as the #5 smartest move.
- As an April Fools' gag in 2005, IGN claimed that a 1/4 scale R.O.B., with a Game Boy Advance version of Gyromite, would be coming out in the NES Classics Series. In the article was a black-and-white product shot from a fictional newspaper.
- In the January 2006 issue of Wired, R.O.B. placed at 45 in the list of "50 Best Bots Ever".
External links
- Repairing your broken R.O.B. at Nintendo Gadgets
- R.O.B. at the Gamers Graveyard
- R.O.B. at NES World