Along the way, it was necessary to find a way out of the level, while trying not to fall victim to enemies and not blow up on our own bombs. Destroying brick blocks, the player collected bonuses that strengthened him, among which were the acceleration of movement, an increase in the striking radius of the bomb, an increase in the number of simultaneously planted bombs, and so on. In addition to the main character.Įnemies also roamed the level, depicted in the form of onions, amoebas and other ridiculous creatures. In the role of a character named Doberman, the player had to move around a rectangular level containing indestructible concrete and brick blocks that could be blown up with bombs. The mechanics of the original 1983 game were incredibly simple, but no less fun for that. Today I would like to tell you about the game Super Doberman R for the Nintendo Switch console, which continues this glorious series. Among all this diversity, there was such a wonderful game as Doberman, which was released in Japan back in 1983. We spent days hacking into Tanks (Battle City), Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles, Super Mario Bros. In the early 90s, when Taiwanese clones of the Japanese console Nintendo Femidom flooded our country, and yellow pirated cartridges began to be sold on the markets, domestic gamers first joined Japanese video games.