The game was developed in 1997 under the name
Sarugetchu, and was the first game to explicitly require the DualShock controller. The game was a success, going Platinum, entering the Greatest Hits series in the US, and entered the "Best Of" releases in Japan. It was reviewed positively, and was compared to games such as
Super Mario 64.
Ape Escape 2001 was released in 2001. It is the first game in the series to have been developed for PlayStation 2. The next year,
Ape Escape 2 was developed by Sony and published in Japan in 2002 and in Europe and North America in 2003. In 2003, SCEI worked on a multiplayer party game and the sequel to
Piposaru 2001.
Ape Escape: Pumped & Primed was released in Japan through Sony Computer Entertainment Inc. and the US through Ubisoft in 2004.
Ape Escape: On the Loose, a remake of the original game was released globally as one of the launch games for the PlayStation Portable. In 2005,
Ape Academy (also known as
Ape Escape Academy) was released for the PlayStation Portable.
Eye Toy: Monkey Mania was a party game inspired by
Mario Party which was only released in Europe and Japan. In mid-2005,
Ape Escape 3 was released to positive critical reception. After the release of
Ape Escape 3, Sony Computer Entertainment Europe showed interest in publishing
Ape Academy 2 and
Ape Escape: Million Monkeys; however, Sony Computer Entertainment America showed more interest in developing its own game.
Ape Academy 2 was released in 2006 for the PlayStation Portable to mixed success and sold very well in Japan, entering the "Best of" category, but failed to perform well in Europe, due to Sony focusing on
Million Monkeys.
Million Monkeys was released in Japan in July 2006, making it the last official PlayStation 2 game in the series. The game was planned to be released in the United Kingdom in late 2006, but the game was postponed and later canceled. Its impact in Japan led to the inclusion of its iteration of series protagonist Spike in
PlayStation All-Stars Battle Royale in 2012. In late 2006,
PipoRacer was released in Japan for PlayStation Portable. In 2008, Japan Studio and
h.a.n.d. developed
Ape Escape: SaruSaru Big Mission. Both titles were never released outside Japan. In 2006, Sony placed an advertisement in a
Famitsu magazine with interest in hiring staff for an upcoming game. It contains a picture with four monkeys, with the first holding up
Ape Escape, the second holding up
Ape Escape 2, the third holding up
Ape Escape 3 and the fourth holding a cover with "?". The fourth entry was in development, but is still unreleased. A tweet by Sony Computer Entertainment Japan on
Twitter was posted on January 5, 2016, reading, "2016 Year of the Monkey. Today, SCE will begin working! #Monkey #YearofMonkey" alongside an image of a Pipo Monkey". In 2019, the 20th anniversary of the franchise, for the first time in more than 5 years, the official Japanese website for the
Ape Escape series was updated and an official Japanese
Ape Escape 20th anniversary account was made on Twitter.
Ape Quest, a role-playing game, was released in 2008 on the PSN store in North America and Europe and in March 2009 in Japan. It was co-developed by Shift and
Alvion and published by
Sony Computer Entertainment worldwide. It was the first game in the series to be a PSN-only game, excluding Asia, where it received a physical release. In 2009, a game titled
Ape Escape was announced along with the
PlayStation Move. Critics speculated that it was the fourth entry in the series, after Sony's 2006 advertisement. In Q3 2010,
PlayStation Move: Ape Escape was officially announced under the party genre, and with a different name for every region. It was released in Japan in December 2010, Asia in January 2011, and the UK and Europe in mid-2012 as a
GameStop exclusive. In the US, the game was only made available on the PSN store. After the release of
PlayStation Move: Ape Escape, no games were announced in 2012, making it the first year since 2002 that no
Ape Escape game had been released and the first year that no game had been announced within each region. ==Games==