Compare Cosmic Cavern 3671  宇宙最大の地底最大の作戦 prices across 50+ stores and find the best deal. Developed by Mindware. Published by Mindware. Released on 7/14/2016. Available on PC. Genres: Action, Casual, Indie, Strategy.

If you think Dig Dug invented tactical digging, this 1980 Japanese original will correct that assumption fast - three versions bundled, two-player co-op included, and a 64% approval rating that tells you exactly who it is and is not for.

I went into Cosmic Cavern 3671 expecting a nostalgia curio and came out genuinely rethinking how early the strategic layer in arcade games actually arrived. The original Cosmic Cavern predates Dig Dug by two years, published in 1980 by Takaya Arita in the Japanese computer magazine I/O - and Mindware's 2016 revival is not a lazy ROM dump. It packages three distinct versions of the game: the original, and two arranged variants that smooth out the roughest edges of the 1980 design while preserving the core decision loop that made it interesting in the first place. The mechanical heart here is best described as base defense through terrain manipulation. You are not just digging tunnels for points. You are constructing, collapsing, and controlling underground geometry to slow, redirect, and eliminate enemies before they reach your position. Community discussions make clear that once enemies escalate - and they do escalate, digging aggressively straight toward your base - the game stops being an arcade reflex test and starts being a positional puzzle under pressure. That is the part that actually held my attention. The original version is uncompromising in ways that will frustrate anyone expecting a gentle entry curve, but the arranged modes exist precisely to reduce that friction without flattening the strategic depth. The production credentials on the arranged versions are legitimately noteworthy. Graphics were supervised by Hiroshi Ono, the artist responsible for the visual identity of Dig Dug, Xevious, and Mappy, and the soundtrack comes from Yuzo Koshiro, whose work spans Streets of Rage through Shenmue. For a release at this price point, that is a collaboration that would be hard to justify dismissing on pedigree alone. Two-player local co-op is present, which opens up coordination options that single-player simply cannot replicate - splitting tunnel duties and covering each other's flanks changes the strategy calculus meaningfully. That said, the caveats are real and worth stating plainly. The Steam user review pool is tiny - only 14 reviews at a 64% positive rate - which means the mixed rating reflects genuine division rather than a statistical outlier. Players in the community have flagged a known technical issue where game speed is tied to monitor refresh rate, a problem inherited from the original hardware era that can make the game run incorrectly on modern high-refresh displays and may require manual workarounds. There is also no meaningful tutorial, and most written guides are in Japanese. If you are not willing to consult community resources or tolerate some setup friction, that is a real barrier. The mod ecosystem is essentially nonexistent, and the game has received no significant post-launch updates that address the refresh rate problem at the engine level. Who actually should buy this: retro strategy fans who want to understand where the tactical digging genre came from before Dig Dug standardized it, local co-op households willing to experiment with something genuinely odd, and collectors drawn to the legitimate historical artifact angle. Who should skip it: anyone expecting a polished modern release, players on high-refresh monitors unwilling to troubleshoot, or newcomers to the genre who want a game that explains itself. The arranged modes help, but Cosmic Cavern 3671 is ultimately a preservation project wearing a light modernization coat - and there is real value in that, provided your expectations are calibrated to match. Diego, Scout Team

Cosmic Cavern 3671  宇宙最大の地底最大の作戦
ActionCasualIndieStrategy

Cosmic Cavern 3671  宇宙最大の地底最大の作戦

Jul 14, 2016Mindware
GamerScout Says

If you think Dig Dug invented tactical digging, this 1980 Japanese original will correct that assumption fast - three versions bundled, two-player co-op included, and a 64% approval rating that tells you exactly who it is and is not for.

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About Cosmic Cavern 3671  宇宙最大の地底最大の作戦

I went into Cosmic Cavern 3671 expecting a nostalgia curio and came out genuinely rethinking how early the strategic layer in arcade games actually arrived. The original Cosmic Cavern predates Dig Dug by two years, published in 1980 by Takaya Arita in the Japanese computer magazine I/O - and Mindware's 2016 revival is not a lazy ROM dump. It packages three distinct versions of the game: the original, and two arranged variants that smooth out the roughest edges of the 1980 design while preserving the core decision loop that made it interesting in the first place. The mechanical heart here is best described as base defense through terrain manipulation. You are not just digging tunnels for points. You are constructing, collapsing, and controlling underground geometry to slow, redirect, and eliminate enemies before they reach your position. Community discussions make clear that once enemies escalate - and they do escalate, digging aggressively straight toward your base - the game stops being an arcade reflex test and starts being a positional puzzle under pressure. That is the part that actually held my attention. The original version is uncompromising in ways that will frustrate anyone expecting a gentle entry curve, but the arranged modes exist precisely to reduce that friction without flattening the strategic depth. The production credentials on the arranged versions are legitimately noteworthy. Graphics were supervised by Hiroshi Ono, the artist responsible for the visual identity of Dig Dug, Xevious, and Mappy, and the soundtrack comes from Yuzo Koshiro, whose work spans Streets of Rage through Shenmue. For a release at this price point, that is a collaboration that would be hard to justify dismissing on pedigree alone. Two-player local co-op is present, which opens up coordination options that single-player simply cannot replicate - splitting tunnel duties and covering each other's flanks changes the strategy calculus meaningfully. That said, the caveats are real and worth stating plainly. The Steam user review pool is tiny - only 14 reviews at a 64% positive rate - which means the mixed rating reflects genuine division rather than a statistical outlier. Players in the community have flagged a known technical issue where game speed is tied to monitor refresh rate, a problem inherited from the original hardware era that can make the game run incorrectly on modern high-refresh displays and may require manual workarounds. There is also no meaningful tutorial, and most written guides are in Japanese. If you are not willing to consult community resources or tolerate some setup friction, that is a real barrier. The mod ecosystem is essentially nonexistent, and the game has received no significant post-launch updates that address the refresh rate problem at the engine level. Who actually should buy this: retro strategy fans who want to understand where the tactical digging genre came from before Dig Dug standardized it, local co-op households willing to experiment with something genuinely odd, and collectors drawn to the legitimate historical artifact angle. Who should skip it: anyone expecting a polished modern release, players on high-refresh monitors unwilling to troubleshoot, or newcomers to the genre who want a game that explains itself. The arranged modes help, but Cosmic Cavern 3671 is ultimately a preservation project wearing a light modernization coat - and there is real value in that, provided your expectations are calibrated to match. Diego, Scout Team

Tags

singleplayermultiplayercoopachievementstrading-cardstier:indieTactical DiggingBase DefenseTerrain ManipulationLocal Co-opRetro PreservationArcade StrategyJapanese RetroScore AttackArchaic Controls

System Requirements

Minimum

OS
Windows 7 or later
Memory
512 MB RAM
DirectX
Version 9.0c
Storage
50 MB available space
Graphics
DirectX 9.0c compatible graphic card
Processor
Dual-core processor (Intel Dual Core 2.0 GHz or AMD Athlon X2 5200+ 2.6 GHz)
Sound Card
DirectX 9.0c compatible sound card

Recommended

OS
Windows 7 or later
Memory
1 GB RAM
DirectX
Version 9.0c
Storage
50 MB available space
Graphics
DirectX 9.0c compatible graphic card
Processor
Dual-core processor (Intel Dual Core 2.0 GHz or AMD Athlon X2 5200+ 2.6 GHz)
Sound Card
DirectX 9.0c compatible sound card

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Game Info

Developer
Mindware
Publisher
Mindware
Release Date
Jul 14, 2016

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What platforms is Cosmic Cavern 3671  宇宙最大の地底最大の作戦 available on?

Cosmic Cavern 3671  宇宙最大の地底最大の作戦 is available on PC.

When was Cosmic Cavern 3671  宇宙最大の地底最大の作戦 released?

Cosmic Cavern 3671  宇宙最大の地底最大の作戦 was released on 14 July 2016.

Who developed Cosmic Cavern 3671  宇宙最大の地底最大の作戦?

Cosmic Cavern 3671  宇宙最大の地底最大の作戦 was developed by Mindware.