A rare Jaleco platformer, now a collector cult favorite. Shapy morphs into several forms to cross a fantastical world. Animation exceptionally polished for Game Boy, nonviolent writing, dreamlike atmosphere. Short but beautiful. Today the cart sells at a hefty price. Absolutely worth discovering.
Your verdict
Category
Action Adventure1 player3+
Description
Rare Jaleco platformer with shapeshifting Shapy exploring a fantastical world to save his people. Published by Jaleco, released in Europe in 1992. Shapy's transformations into different forms depending on the situation, colorful levels, dreamy atmosphere, and an extremely rare and sought-after title.
Trip World review
MAX
Art direction
★★★★★
"Iconic"
4/5
Music
★★★★★
"Excellent"
1/5
Story
★★★★★
"Anecdotal"
A rare work from Jaleco, the game unfurls backdrops of a gentleness and finesse astonishing for the hardware. The malleable Shapy, his metamorphoses and silky animation compose a small, poetic world. This graphic elegance, long confidential, now stands as a hidden jewel of the library.
Strictly European Sunsoft release with no American counterpart, which makes it one of the recognised grails of the Western Game Boy catalogue. Animation and art direction by the Mr. Gimmick team, whose pastel visual identity and movement fluidity stand out within the PAL catalogue. Sunsoft Europe run was extremely short, and the cartridge in a clean cardboard box regularly reaches headline numbers at specialised auctions.
An underrated gem
With this platformer Sunsoft crafted a small, dreamlike fable in which a shape-shifting hero drifts through a colourful, strangely peaceful world. Released only in Europe and in tiny numbers, it escaped almost everyone. Short but of rare gentleness, its atmosphere and polished animation make it a treasure for fans of poetic platforming.
Is Trip World still worth playing in 2026?
A Sunsoft platformer turned cult object among collectors, Trip World stands out by tone. Shapy morphs into several forms to cross a fantasy world without head-on violence, supported by animation that is exceptionally polished for the Game Boy and a softness of motion rare at the time. Short but visually coherent, the experience is closer to a quiet journey than to a challenge. The cart now commands absurd prices, yet the contents justify the curiosity, especially for fans of contemplative platforming and the unfairly overlooked tail of the Game Boy library.