
Flashing Red/Blue Bell Creates image copies of the player's ship that will imitate their actions, increasing their firepower. Red Bell Causes the player's gun to shoot an enemy piercing laser beam. White Bell Turns the player's gun into a double shot. The speed can be increased up to seven times. Blue Bell Increases the ship's speed by one level. The more yellow bells are picked up without missing one, the greater the points will be (500, 1,000, 2,500, 5,000, and eventually 10,000 points). Shooting a bell several times will change their colors.īell power-ups Yellow Bell Gives the player bonus points. The player can uncover bell power-ups by shooting the floating clouds. When that happens, an ambulance will appear that can repair both arms. If both arms of the player's ships are destroyed, then the player will be incapable of dropping bombs. One button is used to shoot the gun at airborne enemies, while the other drops bombs at ground enemies. The player maneuvers the ship with the D-Pad. They were originally nameless in the actual game. Cinnamon's great grandchildren: Squash, Whip, and Mellow. In the instruction manual of Detana TwinBee Yahho! Deluxe Pack, the pilots of the three ships are identified as Dr.

He was kidnapped by Poko Poko during an errand. GwinBee A green-colored aircraft and the baby brother of TwinBee and WinBee. Can fire up to four shots rapidly and has a barrier durability of fifteen shots. Can fire up to two shots rapidly and has a barrier durability of ten shots WinBee The default Player 2 aircraft, colored red. The game uses digitized PCM voice samples, particularly when the conga music in one stage chants "Poko Poko", and in the beginning of each stage, in which a voice proclaims the name of the stage.Ĭharacters TwinBee The default Player 1 aircraft, colored blue. The game is considerably easier than its predecessors due to an option mode that allows players to adjust the difficulty and number of ships, as well as the inclusion of the new "soul reviving system", which allows players to recover their power-ups after losing a ship. Moreover, the game lacks the 3-Player mode from Moero, allowing only up to two players. TwinBee 3 ditches the side-scrolling stages from Stinger and only features top-scrolling ones similar to the original. It was re-released on Apas part of the i-Revo downloadable game service. Unlike Moero, which was released in North America as Stinger, TwinBee 3 was a Japan-only release. It was the third game in the TwinBee series released for the Famicom, following the home version of the original TwinBee and the Famicom-exclusive Moero TwinBee.

TwinBee 3: Poko Poko Daimaō is a vertical-scrolling shoot 'em up video game produced by Konami originally released for the Family Computer in 1989.
