I just wrote a review on Trash Panic a few days ago, but the review today is on a slightly arranged version (available at PlayStation Store Japan) called “100-yen GOMIBAKO.”
As the name suggests, the cost is 100yen, which will give you 3 credits, just like an arcade game. with 1 credit, you’ll be able to play up until end of Stage 3.
There are 2 courses: the “Regular Gomibako” and the “Harden Steel Gomibako.” The “Regular” course is just like the normal Trash Panic where you’d play with the blue garbage can. The “Harden Steel” on the other hand is, as the official website suggests, for “complete beginners.” That’s no lie, as it’s much easier to crash the garbage, and it’s pretty cool to see how easily garbage would burn or decompose.
Given the greatly reduced difficulty level and how pretty much anyone can enjoy the destruction of garbage (which certainly is the beauty of this game in my humble opinion), 100-yen GOMIBAKO seems like a better deal than the normal version, but this isn’t the only pro side of this version. Completing “Regular” will earn you some reward items you can use in PlayStation Home (determined by score and rating upon completion), and completing “Harden Steel” will earn you the “Harden Steel Can,” an item which is extremely difficult to earn in the normal version of the game. However, you must have a save file for the normal Trash Panic to earn the “Harden Steel Can” (meaning you had to have purchased Trash Panic first, create a save file, and then play 100-yen).
If you have an account with PlayStation Store Japan, and are debating whether to buy Trash Panic or not, I would suggest trying out the 100-yen GOMIBAKO first. As I mentioned earlier, 100 yen will get you 3 credits, so spend a credit to try it out, and if you like it, purchase the normal version and use the remaining credits to earn the rewards. Unlike an arcade, you don’t have to use up all 3 credits in one go.
If you have an account with the North American PlayStation Store, you could probably consider yourself lucky, since there is a playable demo of Trash Panic available (which, by the way, is not something offered in its Japanese counterpart).