

After Bomberman 64, he almost always gets a different voice actor outside Japan for each successive game, save for Bomberman Generation and Bomberman Jetters, in which he is voiced by Sheryl Stanley.
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He also makes a playable appearance in a giant mecha crafted after himself in Star Parodier, a spoof of the Star Soldier series which is also developed by Hudson Soft.
#Super bomberman r online trophy tv
White Bomberman made certain crossover appearances, such as DreamMix TV World Fighters, a fighting game with characters from Hudson Soft, Konami and Takara.They were published only in Germany, though fan translations have appeared since then. White Bomberman appeared in three of the German Club Nintendo comics. Through the course of the series, he begins to mature and becomes more experienced. However, unlike what people thought from the brave, gentle Mighty, his brother was actually childish, immature, and inexperienced, with only a single Bomb Star. In Bomberman Jetters, White Bomber (or Shiro Bom) is the ten-year old brother of the hero, Mighty. White Bomber in Bomberman Jetters Main article: White Bomber (Anime) White Bomber (Shiro Bom) is the main protagonist in Bomberman B-Daman Bakugaiden and Bomberman B-Daman Bakugaiden Victory. Each of these introduced their own characters, and contain mostly different takes on the series.īomberman B-Daman Bakugaiden IV & V Main article: White Bomber (B-Daman) He has featured in three anime series: Bomberman B-Daman Bakugaiden, Bomberman B-Daman Bakugaiden Victory (based on the marble shooting game B-Daman) and Bomberman Jetters. He never holds back while fighting and focuses a lot on training to be the strongest warrior ever. His bright, kind spirit and courage are greatly appreciated by others. White Bomberman is usually portrayed as the heroic, upbeat, yet cheerful and jolly type, but sometimes goofy, all too willing to make friends with people he had once considered enemies.

His original enemy was Black Bomberman, but he reformed after the two allied in Super Bomberman. More recently, the Bomberman Jetters video game (a follow-up of sorts to Bomberman Generation) names his organization the Jetters, but that might only be pertinent to the Jetters anime.īomberman's arch-nemeses are Bagura and Mujoe, and his rivals include his friend Max and foe Regulus. Bomberman Hero introduces Bomber Base, a headquarters on Planet Bomber where he trains diligently. Ein, who takes an advisory role in certain missions. Saturn Bomberman introduces a benevolent human scientist named Dr. In Bomberman '93, he is shown to be a "Bomber Cop" detective who upholds the peace of the galaxy, and Bomberman '94 establishes the main setting as Planet Bomber rather than Earth. Mitsumori uses Bomberman as the model for subsequent lifelike Bomberman robots, and the time period is stated to be sometime in the future (specified to be the late 21st century in the arcade game). Both franchises have since mostly moved in separate directions, but loose references remain in later titles. As Lode Runner, he is a famous Galactic Commando tasked with evading the empire's guards and reclaiming stolen gold, and in the 1985 direct sequel Lode Runner's Rescue, his daughter Alexandra has to save him after his capture. The ending features the miraculous transformation into his "Runner" identity which serves as a prequel to the 1983 Lode Runner, also suggesting that the story involved the recurring Bungeling Empire from early Brøderbund products. The background given in the console game begins with the eponymous character having grown tired of making bombs in an unnamed underground empire and deciding to escape after hearing a rumor that a robot can become human. This is actually a palette swap of the enemies seen in the 1984 Hudson Soft port of Lode Runner, but this appearance has more or less remained constant in the series. He also had a white horizontal stripe on his back, which was replaced with a black belt in subsequent appearances. In the Famicom/NES Bomber Man (1985), the hat was swapped with a helmet and antenna, and he was given a blue suit with white and pink limbs. In the home computer game Bomber Man (1983) and its second edition 3-D Bomberman (1984), "Bomber Man" (as his name was originally parsed) was depicted as a human with overalls, a visible mouth, hair, and a white hat with a red feather. 3.1 Bomberman B-Daman Bakugaiden IV & V.
