Undertale Yellow

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Undertale Yellow
Developer(s)Team Undertale Yellow
Director(s)MasterSwordRemix
Composer(s)
  • MasterSwordRemix
  • MyNewSoundtrack
  • NoteBlock
  • Figburn
  • GlitchedPie
  • emBer
  • DYLZAL
EngineGameMaker Studio
Platform(s)Windows
ReleaseDecember 9, 2023
Genre(s)Role-playing
Mode(s)Single-player

Undertale Yellow is a 2023 2D role-playing video game released on Game Jolt for Microsoft Windows on December 9, 2023. Developed by Team Undertale Yellow as a fan-made prequel to Undertale, the game follows a human child named Clover, who possesses the yellow soul from Undertale, as they journey on an unfamiliar path to the surface after falling into the monster-inhabited Underground.[1] The game received generally positive reviews upon release.

Gameplay[edit]

Undertale Yellow closely mimics the battle system of Undertale but makes small stylistic changes, such as the use of a shooting target, to differentiate itself from its predecessor.

Undertale Yellow is a role-playing game that employs similar gameplay mechanics to Undertale. The player controls a human child and explores the Underground, a vast subterranean landscape where they must battle monsters and solve puzzles to progress. Alongside familiar locations and characters from its predecessor, the game introduces many original areas and monsters.[2] In combat, players are given the choice to defeat monsters through violence or pacifism. Choices made by the player both inside and outside of combat determine the game's story progression, tone, and difficulty, with Undertale Yellow employing a comparable theme of morality to Undertale.[citation needed]

During battles with monsters, the player controls a heart representing the human's soul to evade bullet hell attacks from their opponents. Unlike in Undertale, the soul's color remains unchanged as the game progresses. However, some boss battles introduce gimmicks that alter the soul's movement, abilities, and appearance in various ways. On their turn, players can choose from the options FIGHT, ACT, ITEM, and MERCY. Selecting FIGHT causes one or more shooting targets to appear instead of the elliptical pattern from Undertale, but damage is still dealt by timing button presses. Otherwise, the game's battle system is nearly identical to its predecessor's. Defeating enemies by any means will reward the player with gold, but killing them will also earn the player EXP, which can increase their LOVE. However, opting to kill enemies instead of sparing them will permanently influence the player's story route and ending.[citation needed]

Undertale Yellow includes several quality-of-life improvements over Undertale, such as the ability to run in the Overworld for faster travel. The game also allows the player to retry boss battles immediately from the game over screen, a feature not present in its predecessor. In the game's configuration settings, players can also access various accessibility options, including the ability to make running automatic and an "easy mode" that boosts the player's defense to reduce the game's difficulty.[3]

Plot[edit]

Undertale Yellow is set in the world of Undertale, where monsters were sealed beneath Mount Ebott with a magic spell following their defeat in a war against humans. Many years later, Asgore, the king of the monsters, has collected five of the seven human souls needed to break the barrier to the surface world. The story follows Clover, a human child embodying the trait of "justice," as they enter the Underground to investigate the disappearance of the five humans. Falling through a crack in the Ruins, they meet Flowey, a sentient flower, who teaches the player about the game's mechanics. Flowey accompanies Clover on a journey to Asgore's castle, where Clover can cross the barrier to return to the surface. Since Clover cannot save their progress independently, Flowey also offers to do so for them.

While traversing the Underground, Clover explores many new locations, including previously unseen sections of areas from Undertale. They encounter numerous monsters, such as Dalv, a recluse living in the Dark Ruins; Martlet, a member of the royal guard stationed in Snowdin Forest; Starlo, the sheriff of the Wild East; Ceroba, Starlo's childhood friend and the wife of a deceased former royal scientist, Chujin; and Axis, a hostile robot residing in the Steamworks. Most monsters engage Clover in combat, giving them the choice to either fight and possibly kill them or to show them mercy.

The game's story diverges based on how the player chooses to resolve battles with monsters. If the player chooses to kill some but not all of the monsters, they experience the "Neutral" ending. When Clover almost reaches Asgore's castle, Martlet offers to keep them safe in the Underground instead. However, Flowey kills her after Clover agrees. Enraged, he admits to manipulating Clover's journey to ensure they reach Asgore alive, in order to steal and absorb the human souls while Asgore is distracted. With his plan failed, he attempts to absorb Clover's soul during a nightmarish battle in his mind. However, Flowey eventually grows bored of the fight, citing Clover's refusal to surrender. Disappointed with this outcome, he decides to reset the timeline to achieve a better ending in the next run, abruptly ending the game.

If the player chooses to spare all of the monsters, they experience the "Pacifist" ending. Ceroba discloses that her daughter Kanako has "fallen down" (a fatal condition rendering her comatose). She accompanies Clover through the Steamworks as a shortcut to the royal lab to investigate Kanako's situation. The two of them are interrupted by Starlo, who questions Ceroba's motives and chases her away. It is revealed that Chujin attempted to create a soul-strengthening serum using the souls of a human and a "boss monster," which Ceroba intended to perfect using Kanako's and Clover's souls. Martlet, Starlo, and Clover confront Ceroba, but she is able to overpower all of them. During the final battle against Ceroba, Clover learns that Kanako fell down when her mother attempted to test the serum on her. Upon being defeated, Ceroba collapses in anguish and asks Clover to finish her off.

If the player kills Ceroba, Martlet escorts Clover to the castle's throne room, and the game ends with Asgore claiming their soul in battle. If Ceroba is spared, the player experiences the "True Pacifist" ending, where she expresses remorse for her actions before reconciling with the others. After reflecting on their journey, Clover decides to sacrifice their soul to aid in the freedom of monsters. During the game's credits, Dalv, Martlet, Starlo, and Ceroba float Clover's hat and gun down a raft leading to Waterfall's garbage dump. Later, Clover's soul hears and answers a call for help from "someone." Both scenes tie into the events of Undertale.

If the player kills enough monsters to exhaust the kill counter for every required room of the game, they experience the "No Mercy" or "Genocide" ending. The game's tone changes significantly during this route, with the soundtrack becoming more ominous, monsters disappearing from the Overworld, and most major fights becoming more intense and difficult. Additionally, Clover exhibits increasingly aggressive and threatening behaviors as the story progresses. Before they reach Asgore's castle, Martlet tries to stop them by transforming into a powerful being with a serum from the royal lab, but she fails and dies. After the battle, Flowey accidentally reveals his desire to steal the human souls and gets killed. In the castle's throne room, Asgore is instantly defeated with a massive beam fired from Clover's soul, and the game ends with Clover crossing the barrier with the five human souls in tow. The severity of the events in this ending renders it wholly incompatible with the Undertale canon.

Development and release[edit]

Undertale has inspired many to create amazing things and it is no different here. After playing through Undertale for the first time I was lying in my bed when the idea almost randomly popped into my head. The pieces seemed to line up perfectly so I got to work as soon as I could.

MasterSwordRemix in 2016[4]

Development on Undertale Yellow began after Toby Fox, the creator of Undertale, approved it upon contact from Team Undertale Yellow. It would continue for nearly seven years.[5] Created with the GameMaker Studio engine, the game was conceived by writer and composer MasterSwordRemix. Its official announcement came in April 2016, accompanied by a trailer with an unspecified release date of "soonish."[6] Over the course of development, several animators, artists, composers, and writers joined Team Undertale Yellow, ultimately forming a team of over twenty people.[2] Although a winter 2022 release was originally planned,[7] the game was eventually released for free on December 9, 2023.[8]

The Undertale Yellow Soundtrack consists of 135 tracks, many of which are based on those from Undertale. This has sparked a debate over the game's usage of copyrighted material. Sebastian Wolff, the CEO of Materia Collective, which licensed the music of Undertale, requested to see the "defined permission that Toby granted 7 years ago" that allows Team Undertale Yellow to use Undertale's music. In response, Fox stated that he had not given recent permission but criticized Wolff's handling of the situation as "extremely unprofessional." As an apology, he offered to donate $20,000 to Team Undertale Yellow's charity of choice, AbleGamers.[9]

Reception[edit]

Undertale Yellow was highly anticipated by YouTubers and received generally positive reviews upon its release,[10] garnering around 350,000 downloads in its first month.[11] Before its release, Dominic Tarason of Rock Paper Shotgun declared Undertale Yellow to be his "favourite unfinished fan-game".[12] Will Nelson of PCGamesN recommended it to Undertale fans, noting how Toby Fox started out with a fan game of EarthBound and expressing that "seeing another group of developers bring it full circle [...] is nothing short of astounding."[13] Aleks Franiczek of RPGFan also praised the game, stating that "in some respects, [it] even surpasses [Undertale]".[14]

References[edit]

  1. ^ "Fan-Made Free-to-Play Undertale Prequel Has Been Released". 80.lv. December 11, 2023. Retrieved December 21, 2023.
  2. ^ a b Kuleshova, Ekaterina. "Фанаты Undertale выпустили игру-приквел после более 7 лет разработки — Игромания" [Undertale fans have released a prequel game after more than 7 years of development]. Igromania (in Russian). Retrieved December 12, 2023.
  3. ^ Team Undertale Yellow. "Version 1.1 Out Now! (Patch Notes)". Game Jolt. Retrieved January 8, 2024.
  4. ^ MasterSwordRemix (December 9, 2016). "Interview: MasterSwordRemix of Undertale Yellow". Hey Poor Player (Interview). Interviewed by Kenny McKee. Retrieved January 19, 2024.
  5. ^ Sullivan, Kean (January 19, 2022). "Undertale Fan Prequel is Almost Done". Game Rant. Retrieved December 15, 2023.
  6. ^ MasterSwordRemix (April 30, 2016), Undertale Yellow (Official Reveal Trailer), retrieved December 20, 2023
  7. ^ Fahey, Mike (January 18, 2022). "Undertale Fan Prequel Six Years In The Making Almost Done, Looks Fantastic". Kotaku. Retrieved December 12, 2023.
  8. ^ MasterSwordRemix (December 9, 2023), Undertale Yellow Launch Trailer, retrieved December 21, 2023
  9. ^ Ostler, Anne-Marie (January 8, 2024). "Undertale's Toby Fox says fans should be "supported at every opportunity" amid debate over music rights in fanmade prequel". GamesRadar+. Retrieved January 8, 2024.
  10. ^ Uslenghi, Fabiano (December 11, 2023). "7 Jahre gewartet: Zum Rollenspiel-Phänomen Undertale gibt's jetzt ein kostenloses Prequel" [7 years in the making: The RPG phenomenon Undertale now has a free prequel]. GameStar (in German). Retrieved December 12, 2023.
  11. ^ Nelson, Will (January 16, 2024). "After Undertale Yellow's success, another fan game is on the way". PCGamesN. Retrieved January 17, 2024.
  12. ^ Tarason, Dominic; Tarason, Dominic (May 15, 2018). "Undertale's fan-game scene is alive, well, and has produced a full-length Team Fortress 2 crossover". Rock, Paper, Shotgun. Retrieved December 12, 2023.
  13. ^ Nelson, Will (December 10, 2023). "Steam's best indie game gets a colossal free prequel seven years in the making". PCGamesN. Retrieved December 12, 2023.
  14. ^ Franiczek, Aleks (February 28, 2024). "Undertale Yellow Feels Like a Legit Prequel". RPGFan. Retrieved April 2, 2024.

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