Puyo Puyo: The Come Up

When it rains, it pours, huh? There was a time in the not-too-distant past where the mere thought of Sega localizing another Puyo Puyo game seemed utterly hopeless: while the series maintained a broad audience and massive merchandising clout in Japan, none of the sporadic attempts to reintroduce this arcade puzzle staple to western audience had any lasting impact, and many feared that the last window of opportunity had been sealed shut by the rise of hyper-monetized casual puzzle games. The audience had moved on and the publisher had given up, and so must we. Oh well.

Come 2020, things are looking very different. Thanks in no small part to a timely and surprisingly successful collaboration with Tetris, the Puyo Puyo series has managed to ascend from a place of nigh-irrelevance to one of modest popularity. More and more people recognize the name, know the rules, know the tactics. Tournaments and meetups assemble at fighting game events and conventions without anyone batting an eye. The characters — the characters! — have gained a profile and audience all their own; the Cranky Food Friends days are behind us. There's plenty of room to grow, but it's a nice place to be.

Most immediately, there are a hell of a lot of Puyo Puyo games floating around at the moment: the old, the new, the timeless and the ones inserted into Yakuza games to annoy trophy-hunters. To the uninitiated, a Puyo's a Puyo's a Puyo and that's that, but something tells me a lot of people are going to be looking at these games with a more curious or discriminating eye in the near future, so I've provided a breakdown of the strengths and weaknesses of each of the Puyo Puyo games currently circulating on modern platforms so that you might best choose whichever version suits your interests, or just to help people spot the difference.

Unfortunately, I haven't been able to ascertain which version will give you the edge when Arle comes to Smash, but I'm sure it'll be obvious once she's announced. Enjoy!

Puyo Puyo Tetris (Nintendo Switch, PlayStation 4, PC)

This unexpected falling-block mashup immediately became a cult import item upon its release in Japan in 2014; buoyed by this unanticipated demand and eager to capitalize on the impending release of the Nintendo Switch, Sega ended the decade-plus series drought and released Puyo Puyo Tetris worldwide in 2017, thereby re-establishing the Puyo Puyo franchise overseas in a big way and supplying one of the sleeper hits of the Switch launch window. Who knew a co-sign from the world's most popular puzzle game would carry so much sway?

THE PROS

THE CONS

Puyo Puyo Champions (Nintendo Switch, PlayStation 4, Xbox One, PC)

Released in Japan as Puyo Puyo eSports, this version of the game is a bare-essentials package tailored around competitive play and ease of supply for grassroots tournaments, for which there is substantial and sustained demand; in the rest of the world, it's called Puyo Puyo Champions and it's aimed at people who don't want to pay retail price for a puzzle game, I guess.

THE PROS

THE CONS


Sega Ages Puyo Puyo (Nintendo Switch)

While this 1992 arcade release wasn't strictly the first Puyo Puyo game — it was preceded by a primordial, little-played MSX and Famicom Disk System version, released by developer Compile in 1991 — it was the first one to find mainstream success and the game that established the series' focus on versus play, silly characters and AI battles, so it's fun to look back at where the series found its footing and how much has or hasn't changed in almost 30 years

THE PROS

THE CONS


Sega Ages Puyo Puyo 2 (Nintendo Switch)

The first arcade game was an undisputed hit but Puyo Puyo 2's popularity in Japan was legendary, with the game going toe-to-toe with the likes of Street Fighter 2 for arcade dominance and with tournaments still running to this day; much of that explosive popularity can be attributed to some small but very smart system changes, including the "margin time" rule which causes the power of attacks to escalate as time goes on, as well as the very important "offset" rule which allows players to cancel incoming garbage with their own chains, thereby adding a whole new layer of baiting, defending and counterattacking to a system that was previously fairly linear. (The Sega Ages version literally just came out in Japan — as always, it's already equipped with English text, so import it if you like or wait a few weeks for the official overseas version.)

THE PROS

THE CONS


Super Puyo Puyo 2 (Nintendo Switch via Nintendo Switch Online)

The addition of Super Nintendo games to Nintendo's paid online subscription came with one left-field inclusion: Super Puyo Puyo 2, the Super Famicom conversion of Puyo Puyo 2 and currently the only import game available on NSO. One has to wonder why Sega would release a free version of a game they'd already announced they'd be selling on the same hardware in the near future, or why Nintendo didn't opt for their own Super Puyo Puyo reskin, Kirby's Avalanche, over an untranslated Super Famicom game, but believe me, I'm not complaining.

THE PROS

THE CONS

Dr. Robotnik's Mean Bean Machine (Sega Mega Drive/Genesis Classics collection for consoles & PC, Mega Drive Mini)

Sega's first real attempt to break Puyo Puyo overseas saw them strip out Compile's characters and replace them with an extremely tenuous assortment of characters from the Sonic the Hedgehog omniverse — a sound marketing tactic on paper, but seeing as Sega didn't release another Puyo Puyo game outside of Japan for another nine years after Mean Bean Machine, one has to presume it didn't take.

THE PROS

THE CONS