
- INTELLIGENT QUBE PS1 TRIAL
- INTELLIGENT QUBE PS1 SERIES
- INTELLIGENT QUBE PS1 TORRENT
This spiral continues until you don't even have enough space for the next set of blocks to appear, which will result in being thrown off the stage to your death. As you make mistakes, rows of the playing field start falling off, and thus you are prone to making even more mistakes. A large playing field affords the player more time to think as the cubes come rolling down conversely, one that is too short may not even allow the player enough space to execute all of the moves required for a PERFECT.
Unstable Equilibrium: Your performance on the puzzles is heavily dependent on how many rows of playing field you have to work with. Trapped in Another World: The blackness.
INTELLIGENT QUBE PS1 SERIES
Spiritual Successor: Although they're really completely unrelated, the Practical Intelligence Quotient (PQ) series is considered by many to be the Spiritual Successor to Intelligent Qube, due to being a sort of test, clean graphics, no plot, and a 'meta person' as the main character.For some reason, this is worthy of a soaring orchestral soundtrack that sounds like it came from some high-budget adventure movie. Soundtrack Dissonance: It's a game where you dodge falling cubes in the middle of a black void.
INTELLIGENT QUBE PS1 TORRENT
Sinister Geometry: The only other visible object beside yourself in this game is an endless torrent of unstoppable giant stomping cubes.Scoring Points: You earn ordinary points, and you're also rated on your 'IQ'.Rank Inflation: Your "IQ" can go up to 999.
By the time all the blocks have gone, the player can still win the level by being left standing on a stage consisting of a single row of blocks. The only way to survive is to get run over by each wave of blocks, then quickly outrun the collapsing stage.
Pyrrhic Victory: By the time the last set of blocks appears, it is quite possible that the stage will be so short that few meaningful moves can be made. Nothing Is Scarier: The game takes place in a completely featureless void with nothing but the cubes, your footsteps and the Voice. If you fail, you fall off the Stage into oblivion, and the universe. Some endings end with the caption 'The Beginning of the Universe'. The ending shows the player's character being returned to their normal life, be it in a town, or the army, or wherever, with the Voice sharing some words of encouragement on your victory over the trials of Kurushi. Mind Screw: It's not really explained what's happening in the game at all. Level Editor: The game allows you put your own stages together to play. Large Ham: The way the announcer belts out PERRRRRRRRFECT and EEEEEEEEXCELLENT. The opening FMV in the first game even spells the name out with the correct spelling before going back to change it. You soon learn to do everything humanly possible to always get perfects.
If, on the other hand, you do some miss some blocks, a counter will increment and you may lose one or more rows. This is the only way to add rows to the stage. Completing a level in fewer steps earns you an EEEEEEEEEXCELLENT, and a 'True Genius!' bonus.
Flawless Victory: Completing a level without errors in the correct number of steps earns you a PERRRRRRRRRRFECT from the Voice. Death Cry Echo: Fall into the void, and your character will yell as they fall forever. And you as that man have to capture all of the cubes to avoid being "avalanched" off the stage into the eternal black void. Bizarre Puzzle Game: There's nothing in the world but a man and a lot of cubes. And I Must Scream: If you fail, it appears that you will fall for a very long time. A Compilation Rerelease for the PlayStation Portable, I.Q. It was successful enough to garner a couple sequels that never left Japan and Europe: I.Q. Fail, and the universe will never be created. Succeed, and you'll open your mind to possibilities you never thought possible. You must use your 'mark' to trigger the destruction of each cube, one by one, before they roll off the edge of the Stage, and before they crush you. Giant cubes stomp from the far end of the Stage toward you. INTELLIGENT QUBE PS1 TRIAL
An unseen ' Voice' demands that you take part in an arduous mental and physical trial known as 'Kurushi'.
You play as a man who, for an unknown reason, is stranded on a floating grey platform in the middle of a featureless black void. Intelligent Qube (also known as Kurushi) is a puzzle game series for the Sony PlayStation, developed by the late Sony studio Sugar & Rockets (of Yarudora and Po Po Lo Crois series fame).