Munchy Monk
Your training takes place deep in the mountains. We call it monk training, but it's really just eating dumplings all day. Enjoy! |
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Munchy Monk (しゅうぎょう Shūgyō "training") is the sixteenth game in Rhythm Heaven. It features a Munchy Monk training in the art of eating dumplings. A sequel is unlocked later called Munchy Monk 2.
Gameplay
The Munchy Monk raises out his hand as a person continuously gives him dumplings to eat. He will give the Munchy Monk either one, two, or three dumplings in a row. The monk eats the dumplings by slapping his wrist in order to pop the dumpling in his mouth. To do this correctly, the player must time it right by only tapping the touch screen right after the person says "Go!".
The rhythm tempo will increase depending on the number of dumplings he gives him at a time. The three different tempos are:
- "One, go!": The person gives the monk one white dumpling. These are always consecutive, and require tapping at a constant pace.
- "Two-two! Go-go!": The person gives the monk two pink dumplings. After a slight pause, two quick taps must be made in rhythm.
- "Three, go, go, go!": The person gives the monk three green dumplings in a row. These require faster tapping to eat them all.
Controls
- Tap: Slap wrist
Timing Notes
- Hit: The dumpling flies into the mouth of the Monk and he successfully swallows it.
- Barely: The dumpling flies and hits the Monk's nose in which he exclaims in surprise. A barely counts as a miss.
- Miss: The dumpling falls out off the Monk's hand.
Rating Notes
- Try Again: "You are in grave danger!"
- OK: "You have achieved total fullness!"
- Superb: "Now YOU are the master!"
Rating Screens
- Munchy monk tryagain.png
"You are in grave danger!"
- Munchy monk ok.png
"You have achieved total fullness!"
- Munchy monk superb.png
"Now YOU are the master!"
Appearances
- Munchy Monk
- Munchy Monk 2
- Remix 4
- Remix 8
- Remix 10
Trivia
- In the Japanese versions, when you are given three dumplings, the voice actually counts "1 2 3" in Chinese.
- It is most likely because monks originated from China.
- The dumplings are referred to as a bread called Manju in the Japanese version.
- This is the shortest game in Rhythm Heaven lasting 54 seconds, though it isn't the shortest game in the franchise, as Showtime beats it by 7 Seconds and Rhythm Rally (Megamix) By 12 seconds.
- Since its inception, Munchy Monk has enjoyed perfect attendance in the series, re-appearing in both Fever and Megamix. It shares a similar status as the likes of Karate Man, Samurai Slice, and Built to Scale.
- The game has the same rhythm as Micro-Row 2.
- The game was supposely going to be a game from Rhythm Tengoku but it got scrapped for unknown reasons.
- The employee in Packing Pests bears a striking resemblance to the Munchy Monk, it should also be noted that both games have the characters using their hands in incredibly fast reflexes. However there is no confirmation that they are the same character.
- The game is a parody on real ancient Monks, of which (depending on the religion) starve themselves as part of their training, while here it's the opposite.
Video Gameplay
In Other Languages
Language | Name |
---|---|
Japanese | しゅうぎょう Training |
French | Avide ascète |
Spanish | El monje tragón |
Template:DU German | Dim Sum Fu |
Italian | Monaco Gnam |
Korean | 수행자 Performer |
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