Jumping Flash!

Jumping Flash!
A cartoon rabbit character on a yellow background with text "PlayStation" and "Jumping Flash!"
Promotional artwork used in European and Asian territories.
Developer(s)Exact
Ultra[a]
Publisher(s)Sony Computer Entertainment
Director(s)Koji Tada
Producer(s)
  • Tetsuji Yamamoto
  • Junichiro Ueno
  • Yukihito Morikawa
Designer(s)
  • Toshimitsu Odaira
  • Hiroyuki Saegusa
  • Shuji Nomaguchi
Programmer(s)
  • Hiroshi Yamamoto
  • Kazuki Toyota
  • Takashi Katano
Artist(s)Kazuma Shirasaki
Writer(s)
  • Shuji Nomaguchi
  • Kazuya Sakamoto
Composer(s)Takeo Miratsu
Platform(s)PlayStation
Release
  • JP: 28 April 1995
  • PAL: 29 September 1995
  • NA: 2 November 1995
Genre(s)Platform
Mode(s)Single-player

Jumping Flash![b] is a platform video game developed by Exact and Ultra and published by Sony Computer Entertainment for the PlayStation. It was released on 28 April 1995 in Japan, 29 September 1995 in PAL territories and 2 November 1995 in North America. It was re-released through the PlayStation Network store on PlayStation 3 and PlayStation Portable in 2007, in 2012 on PlayStation Vita and again in 2022 on PlayStation 4 and PlayStation 5.

Presented in a first-person perspective, the game follows a robotic rabbit named "Robbit" as he searches for missing jet pods scattered by the game's astrophysicist antagonist character Baron Aloha. Robbit must explore each section of Crater Planet to retrieve all of the jet pods, stop Aloha and save the world from being destroyed. The game was designed as a technology demonstrator for the PlayStation console and was revealed in early 1994 under the provisional title of "Spring Man". Jumping Flash! utilizes much of the game engine used in Geograph Seal, an earlier game by Exact for the Sharp X68000 home computer.

Jumping Flash! has been described as an ancestor of, as well as an early showcase for, 3D graphics in console gaming. It was generally well received by critics, who praised its graphics and unique 3D platforming gameplay, but it was eventually overshadowed by later 3D platformers of the fifth console generation. Jumping Flash! spawned two sequels: Jumping Flash! 2 and Robbit Mon Dieu. It received positive reviews at the time of release, and made an appearance in Next Generation's "Top 100 Games of All Time" just one year after. The game was described as the third-most underrated video game of all time by Matt Casamassina of IGN in 2007. It holds the Guinness World Record as the "first platform video game in true 3D".
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