Club Penguin Wiki
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|publisher= [[Disney Interactive Studios]]
 
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|year= [[File:NAMap.png|25px]]: November 25, 2008<br/>[[File:EUFlag.png|25px]]: March 13, 2009 (UK and Ireland)<br/>Scandinavia: March 28, 2009<br/>[[File:AUFlag.png|25px]]: April 14, 2009
 
|year= [[File:NAMap.png|25px]]: November 25, 2008<br/>[[File:EUFlag.png|25px]]: March 13, 2009 (UK and Ireland)<br/>Scandinavia: March 28, 2009<br/>[[File:AUFlag.png|25px]]: April 14, 2009
 
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Revision as of 12:20, 20 September 2010

This article is about the Nintendo DS game. For the series, see Club Penguin: Elite Penguin Force (series).
You may have also been looking for the Everyday Phoning Facility or the Elite Penguin Force agency.
Club Penguin: Elite Penguin Force
CP EPF DS

The box art for Elite Penguin Force.
Information
Platform Nintendo DS family
Developer 1st Playable Productions[1]
Publisher Disney Interactive Studios
ESRB rating ESRB E No Descriptors
Genre Point-And-Click
Date released NAMap: November 25, 2008
EUFlag: March 13, 2009 (UK and Ireland)
Scandinavia: March 28, 2009
AUFlag: April 14, 2009

Club Penguin: Elite Penguin Force is a Club Penguin game for the Nintendo DS. It uses the Nintendo DS's touchscreen to complete intuitive secret agent missions for the Elite Penguin Force, a higher tier of the PSA, (until its destruction) as well as mini-games based upon Club Penguin itself. The game received mostly positive reviews[2][3].

History

On Monday, July 14th, 2008, Club Penguin officially announced one of the largest projects the company would probably ever do. They planned to release a special edition of Club Penguin for the Nintendo DS, which was launched in North America on November 25, 2008 and launched in Europe in March 13, 2009. Before the release of the game, they decided the name could be "Club Penguin: Elite Penguin Force".

Nearly a year after the original release, a special edition was released, which contains a 2,500 coin code card, an "EPF" logo stylus, and a DS skin. It also has its own trailer.

Click here to see the original blog post.

Gameplay

EpfMenu

The Club Penguin: Elite Penguin Force Menu.

Epfcodecard

The Code Card, included in the box.

The gameplay is very similar to the online missions, by tapping the Touch Screen.

The box contains a special "Code Card", which when typed in unlocks a Spy Phone (if you do not have one), 1,500 coins, and a Certificate which enables you to access to the Command Room.

In the game, your penguin is assigned an Elite role ranked superior to the secret agents, an "Elite Penguin Force agent". Players embark on missions utilizing both familiar and all-new gadgets, accessories, vehicles, and locations to investigate mysterious events on Club Penguin Island. In addition, the game operates with the Nintendo Wi-Fi system, coins that you earn in the game can be sent to your online penguin via the DS. To earn the virtual coins you must play the mini games.

Development & Data

  • The game took 10 months to be created and it was developed by 1st Playable Productions, LLC
  • It is rated "E for Everyone", by the ESRB, and "3+" by the PEGI.

Release Dates

  • The game was released in North America on November 25, 2008.
  • The game was released in the UK and Ireland on March 13, 2009.
  • The game was released in Norway, Sweden, Denmark, Finland, and Iceland on March 28, 2009.
  • The game was released in Australia and New Zealand in April 16, 2009.

Features

Missions

Main

1. The Mystery Unfolds

2. Left to your Own Devices

3. Rookie on the Rocks

4. Looking for Clues

5. All's Weld That Ends Weld

6. Do It Yourself Carting

7. Double Trouble

8. Flying High Pitched

9. Super Secret Gadgets

10. Damage Control

11. Robotomy 101

12. Robots on the Run

13. An Agent's Work is Never Done

Minor

1. A Wrench in the Works

2. Hide and Seek

3. Leaning Order of Pizza

4. The Wrong Orders

5. Alien Conspiracy

6. Penguin at Work

7. Sweet Friend of Mines

8. Drifting Away

9. Cause and Effect

10. Lost and Confused

Downloadable

1. A Special Message from Aunt Arctic

2. The Puffle Pranksters

Seasonal

1. Spring (April 1–7)

2. Summer (June 20–30)

3. Autumn (October 25–31)

4. Winter (December 14–25)

Regional Variations

  • There is no code card in the UK version's box. Instead, there is a sticker with the code on the plastic wrapping.
  • The DGamer feature is not available on the UK version.
  • The UK version has a Mic. option not found in the American release. It was later added for the 2009 bundle.

Achievements

  • During its first week, it was the number 1 Nintendo DS game in sale, surpassing various Nintendo games and being in 5th place of Amazon videogame sales, both during and after Black Friday[4].
  • In December 2008, the game was announced to be the 4th in popularity of Nintendo DS games in its during the week of its release.
  • In April 2009, the game won an ELAN award for best handheld game.[5]
  • In the announcement of the sequel, Disney also mentioned that the game sold 1.5 million copies in 15 months.
  • The game helped 1st Playable Productions go to place 39 in Develop100 during the 2010 issue.[6]

Beta Elements

Several things not present in the game are seen in several places.

  • The back of the box shows a penguin wearing a red electric guitar. However, the red guitar was probably replaced by the black one during development.
  • The back of the box also shows the penguins in Dance Challenge on one screen, proving it was originally going to be single-screen.
  • Some mission icons and an image in page 10 of the manual show Dot with black hair, instead of blonde hair.

Trailer

Trivia

  • If you go into the Dance Lounge and talk to the penguin there, he says, "Someone told me if I stood in the Dojo for thirty minutes, I'd become a ninja. Do you think that's true?" this is a reference to Sanity1's FALSE rumour on how to become a ninja.
  • There is a reference to Pixar Animation Studios in the HQ. If the lamp on the desk is touched, it bounces like Luxo Jr., the lamp in the Pixar logo shown before every Disney/Pixar movie.
  • The events in the game may have taken place before PSA agents are actually allowed into the Gadget Room in the online secret missions, because in the online missions, the Wheel-Bot is where G put it in "Robotomy 101".
    • This is not true as the belt used to fix the Ski Lift in Secret Mission #4 is in the place of the actual belt that would normally run the Ski Lift.
  • A reference to Penguin Chat 3 is made in "Super Secret Gadgets" when your penguin says while looking at the Snow Trekker, "Wow, I thought they had vanished off the face of the island...", referencing that it disappeared after Penguin Chat 3.
  • Billybob said that penguins wanted a DS game of Club Penguin since the start. Maybe that is why the cabinet where you enter the Command Room is visible on previous online Club Penguin missions before the EPF game was launched.
  • The Cove cannot be seen in the game, even though the Forest is there.
  • When you play the first missions, you talk as if you were not part of the PSA.
  • The opening sequence played when the game is turned on is recreates Get Smart's opening sequence shot for shot at certain parts.
  • The Gift Shop and Sport Shop catalogs in the game are the same, and new items are added at certain times in the game.
  • Since May 20, 2010, this game is no longer connected to the online version anymore (except transfer coins) as becoming an EPF agent doesn't need to have the DS anymore, but you could get more items by using another DS game, Herbert's Revenge.

Sequel

On May 25, 2010, a sequel named Club Penguin: Elite Penguin Force: Herbert's Revenge was released. The sequel follows the plot left by online missions.

Sources and references

External links