The Japanese version for the Family Computer Disk System in 1986, this game allowed up to three players simultaneously. Cinnamon (creator of the TwinBee ships) and TwinBee, WinBee and GwinBee must rescue him.
TWINBEE RAINBOW BELL ADVENTURE SERIES
Moero TwinBee: Cinnamon Hakase wo Sukue!, released on Novemand in 1987 in America as Stinger, this is the first game in the TwinBee series that was released in North America.
![twinbee rainbow bell adventure twinbee rainbow bell adventure](https://i.ytimg.com/vi/n31ywFUA3V4/hqdefault.jpg)
It was released in North America as part of an arcade compilation for Nintendo DS in March, 2007, where it was renamed RainbowBell when the compilation was released in Europe, the TwinBee name was restored. The Famicom version was re-released for the Game Boy Advance under Nintendo's Famicom Mini label in Japan only. A Family Computer (Famicom) and a MSX version were made in 1986. Players use TwinBee or WinBee in a short string of six levels that repeats indefinitely, with a boss at the end of each.
![twinbee rainbow bell adventure twinbee rainbow bell adventure](http://www.nintendoworldreport.com/media/37476/1/4.jpg)
A third ship also exists named GwinBee, a green counterpart to TwinBee and WinBee who in most games serves as a power-up, but in some instances also appear as a third playable spacecraft.
![twinbee rainbow bell adventure twinbee rainbow bell adventure](http://104.236.151.57/wp-content/uploads/2018/01/rainbow2.png)
In most games, the first player controls TwinBee while WinBee is controlled by the second player. The series centers around a blue bumblebee-shaped anthropomorphic fighter craft named TwinBee, who is usually accompanied by a pink "female" counterpart known as WinBee.