ME-tan's World

ME-Tan's World, known in Japan as ME-Tan no Bōken (MEたんの, Emuitan no Bōken), is a 2003 platforming video game developed and published by Futaba Games in Japan, and published by Microsoft overseas. The game is an unusual example of Microsoft publishing a game on a rival's console. The game was created by Yoshitake Yumezumi and scored by Konichi Takeshi. It was first released for the Super Famicom on August 12, 2003 in Japan, and was later ported to the Game Boy Advance 18 days later, being renamed to ME-Tan no Bōken+ (MEたんの+, Emuitan no Bōken Purasu), and was later localized on September 12, 2003 in America and September 30, 2003 in Europe.

The game was released unusually late on the Super Famicom's lifespan, being released over a month before the console got discontinued in Japan. The Super NES was already discontinued overseas, so it cannot be released on that platform overseas, until it was released on the Wii Virtual Console overseas on August 6, 2008 in order to celebrate the OS-Tan's 5th anniversary, with several changes being carried over from the Game Boy Advance release, and was renamed to ME-Tan's World: The Prequel.

A remake for the Switch was announced and originally scheduled for released on March 2021, but was delayed by 2 months due to the COVID-19 pandemic, as well as to avoid competing with its Nintendo Switch Online re-release.

Gameplay
The game takes control of ME-tan, a 7-year-old girl that is a moe anthropomorphism of the 2000 operating system Windows Millenium Edition. She can defend herself with a leek and defeat enemies with her leek.

Development
The game has been in development hell for 5 years, before finally releasing in 2003.

1998: Kirby's Dream Land 4 concept
After Kirby's Dream Land 3 was released in Japan, Yoshitake Yumezumi has plans for a sequel, that would be released on the Family Computer, due to the system selling more units than future Nintendo home consoles. The team at HAL Laboratory loved it, so he decided to develop more of the game. However, there was a major problem in which the system was so limited, they decided to reset development on the Super Famicom.

1999-2000: Super Stickventures 2
After the success of Super Stickventures, Yoshitake Yumezumi decided to develop a sequel for the Satellaview, named Super Stickventures 2, which was released on May 2000 (a month before the add-on was discontinued). The game was split onto parts (due to the add-on's filesize limitation of 8 megabits ). After the add-on was discontinued, people never got the chance to play the game at this point until a ROM of the game was uploaded onto the internet years later.

2000-2003: Silent development
After the Satellaview's death, Yoshitake Yumezumi decided to silently develop the game with no news articles being made at this point. After Futaba Channel bought Gaming Game Japan, development became more troubled.

2003: Finalization and ports
On August 6, 2003, an image of ME-tan was uploaded onto Futaba Channel. The creator of the image later went onto Futaba Games's headquarters to implement her onto the games they are working on. The developers agreed, and replaced the main characters of these games with ME-tan. She was voiced by Monichi Yamakuta (at the time) and defends herself with leeks, with media depicting her as "often intelligent". They decided to push the Super Famicom to its limits to compete against games for the Nintendo 64 and the GameCube. The ROM was also 48 megabits, thus needing an SA-1 chip to work, as well as to reduce slowdown. The Game Boy Advance version was also developed, albeit simultaneously, being 64 megabits.

Legacy
ME-Tan's World got several sequels and merchandise. The game's OST had been included on the music CD ME-Tan no Music Vibe (MEたんのミュージックバイブ, Emuitan no Myūjikku Baibu). An anime named ME-Tan & Friends was also made, featuring some humor.

Reception
The game received mostly positive reviews. Nintendo Life gave the Super Famicom version a score of 9/10, praising its graphics, audio, and gameplay, but critizicing for its release on a dying system. GameFAQs users gave the Game Boy Advance version a score of 4 stars (great).