tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-112845722009-02-20T17:40:39.930-08:00Sega Roms InformationInformation on old sega video game consoles.Murat Alperennoreply@blogger.comBlogger54125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-11284572.post-1124912859416809052005-08-24T12:45:00.000-07:002005-08-24T12:47:39.426-07:00BallzBallz is a two player, 3D action, fighting game for the Sega Genesis, the Super Nintendo Entertainment System (SNES) and the 3DO. It was developed by PF Magic and published by Accolade in 1994. The 3DO version was released as a director's cut in 1995. Ballz offered three difficulty levels over a total of 21 matches. Its distinguishing quality was that each of the characters were composed completely of spheres.<br /><br />Though novel and addictive, this game fared poorly in the marketplace due to botched marketing. Accolade gave it little print advertising, but even the ads it did for the game gave little clue as to what type of game Ballz was. One just had an image of a Christmas Tree made of spheres and contained the caption "Tell your mom you want Ballz for Christmas." The box of the game also gave little hint of the type of game it was, since it depicted just a jumbled image of numerous spheres. Most people assumed it was some sort of Tetris clone.<br /><br /><br />Trivia<br /><br />The opening of the game PF Magic developed for the game stated "To be the champion, you gotta have Ballz!" Due to its racy double-entendre, Nintendo demanded the wording be changed. Since Nintendo was the only manufacturer that could produce any SNES game, Accolade had little choice but to conceed. So the SNES version of the game states, "...you gotta play Ballz," while the Sega version uses the original version of the intro.<br /><br />The Sega version of the game had a lot of trouble with sprite breakup, a common problem for many video games. Sega opposed to the great deal of breakup and rejected the game. Accolade and PF Magic fixed the problem by using a DSP chip on the catridge board, which fixed all instances of breakup. However, the chip added to the cost of each cartridge, forcing the developers to remove some features of the game. Therefore, many of the game's sound effects were removed—to save on the cost of the additional memory chip—and as a result some of the characters share sound effects. The entire catalog of sound effects is found on the SNES version.<div class="blogger-post-footer"><img width='1' height='1' src='https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/tracker/11284572-112491285941680905?l=segaroms.blogspot.com'/></div>Murat Alperennoreply@blogger.com29tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-11284572.post-1123069362761307542005-08-03T04:41:00.000-07:002005-08-03T04:42:42.766-07:00Tactics OgreTactics Ogre: Let Us Cling Together is a tactical role-playing game game developed by Quest. It was originally released in 1995 on the Super Famicom in Japan, and re-released on the Sony PlayStation in 1997/1998. A Sega Saturn version was also released in 1996 along with the original Ogre Battle and both featured voice acting. It's the second game in Quest's Ogre Battle series (preceded by Ogre Battle: March of the Black Queen) and the seventh episode in the series' storyline.<br /><br />The game has a different style from most computer RPGs; the player builds up a team of several characters with changeable classes and fights on an isometric playing field. The gameplay is intermixed with expositional cutscenes revealing a deep plot, and the player has very little control outside of the battles.<br /><br />Characters<br />Denim Powell- The main character in this game. He was born in the city of Griate, Valeria. He is the son of the village priest, Plancy. After Plancy was taken away by the Dark Knights and Griate was burned down by the Knights, Denim, his sister Kachua, and his friend Vice plan a vendetta against the Dark Knights.<br /><br />Lans Hamilton- A holy knight from the Holy Kingdom of Zenobia. His identity is not well-known and he is said to have been exiled from his own country. He brings his men with him to Valeria, who are exiled as well, for a job and eventually meets Denim. Lans agrees to help Denim in his rebellious actions and accompanys him. Lans, Warren, and Canopus were characters in Ogre Battle.<br /><br />Kachua Powell- Denim's sister. Daughter of priest Plancy. She follows Denim in his quest for revenge.<br /><br />Canopus Wolff- Lans' companion. Nickname is the 'Wind Rider'. He is from Zenobia and has served in the revolutionary army of Destin and Tristan and restored the rightful throne of Zenobia. He follows Denim and Lans. Lans, Warren, and Canopus were characters in Ogre Battle.<br /><br />This was the second game known to be directed by Yasumi Matsuno, following its prequel, Ogre Battle, with featured a considerably different game style. It has a few successors in spirit, including:<br /><br />Final Fantasy Tactics (PlayStation) <br />Final Fantasy Tactics Advance (Game Boy Advance) <br />Ogre Battle 64: Person of Lordly Caliber (Nintendo 64) <br />Tactics Ogre: The Knight of Lodis (Game Boy Advance) <br />Each of these games shares similar gameplay aspects with Tactics Ogre. Ogre Battle 64 and Tactics Ogre: Knight of Lodis were not created by Matsuno. They were created by Quest after Matsuno was hired away by Squaresoft (Now SquareEnix) to create titles similar to the first two Ogre Battle games. Final Fantasy Tactics and Final Fantasy Tactics Advance are both Matsuno created, and were released by Squaresoft and SquareEnix respectively.<div class="blogger-post-footer"><img width='1' height='1' src='https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/tracker/11284572-112306936276130754?l=segaroms.blogspot.com'/></div>Murat Alperennoreply@blogger.com2tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-11284572.post-1122838772398666032005-07-31T12:39:00.000-07:002005-07-31T12:39:32.403-07:00Toe Jam & EarlToe Jam & Earl refers to a series of video games published by Sega, concerning the adventures of the eponymous characters, both aliens from the planet Funkotron: Toe Jam, a three-legged, stalk-eyed creature, and Big Earl, a giant sluglike being. All the games employ music and style derived from early-1970s funk music and culture, similar in some respects to the blaxploitation films of that period. The games were created by Toe Jam & Earl Productions Inc., of San Rafael, California.<br /><br />Contents 1 Toe Jam & Earl <br />2 Toe Jam & Earl 2: Panic on Funkotron <br />3 Toe Jam & Earl III: Mission To Earth <br />4 Other Appearances <br /> <br /><br />Toe Jam & Earl<br />The original Toe Jam & Earl, a two-dimensional action game, was released for the Sega Genesis game console in 1991. The game's premise starts with Toe Jam & Earl cruising the stars in their spaceship, when Toe Jam decides to let Earl drive. As a result, the pair crash-land on Earth, their spaceship broken into ten pieces. They must search for the pieces and reassemble their spaceship in order to return home to the planet Funkotron. As they do so, they face a variety of Earthlings that stand in their way, such as the Insane Dentist, Shopping Cart Mom, Nerd Herd, Cupid, and the Phantom Ice Cream Truck, each of which causes the player to lose health and eventually lives.<br /><br />To defend against the Earthlings, a variety of power-ups are provided in the form of presents. Each present appears as a differently-wrapped package, which must be identified either by opening it or by other means. Some presents offer increased mobility for a limited time, such as the Super Hightops (increased speed), Spring Shoes (ability to jump), and Icarus Wings (flight). Other presents provide bonuses, such as extra bucks (which may be used to mail-order presents at mailboxes or to have presents identified by the Wise Man in the Carrot Suit without opening them) or extra lives. Still others are harmful, such as Schoolbook (puts the player to sleep for a time, making them vulnerable to attack) or Randomizer (scrambles all identified presents, requiring them to be identified all over again). Health bonuses in the form of food items are also found; some food items, however, cause the player to lose health rather than gain it.<br /><br />The game has twenty levels, which are logically arranged vertically, one above the other. Players progress upward through the levels by means of an elevator, which appears on each map. Levels also have cliff edges, which the unwary player can fall from, landing on the next-lower level. The terrain also presents hazards such as deserts and lakes.<br /><br />The game's two-player cooperative play is one of its most unique features. When two players play, the game keeps them on the same screen whenever feasible, but switches to split-screen rendering if they get far enough apart. Players can assist one another by performing a high five, which equalizes health between the two. A special present, Togetherness, allows a player to teleport to the other player's location.<br /><br />Toe Jam & Earl was a hit on the Genesis platform; it has been suggested by some that, were it not for Sonic the Hedgehog, Toe Jam and Earl could have become the platform's unofficial mascots. The game appeared on top lists of rentals for years after its release, and is one of the best-remembered Genesis titles.<br /><br /><br />Toe Jam & Earl 2: Panic on Funkotron<br />A sequel to the original in the form of a side-scrolling game, Toe Jam & Earl 2: Panic on Funkotron was released for the Genesis in 1993. In this game, a number of Earthlings have stowed away on Toe Jam and Earl's spaceship, and are now infesting Funkotron. Toe Jam and Earl must capture the Earthlings in jars, and ship them back to Earth in rocket ships at the end of each level.<br /><br />The player has a variety of "funk powers" to assist in evading and capturing the earthlings, such as Funk Move (allowing the player to pass through walls and other objects) and Funk Scan (revealing hidden items). Other bonuses are also found throughout the game, including minigames such as Jam Out (a rhythm-matching game requiring the player to press the controller buttons to match patterns shown on screen) and Hyperfunk Zones (a time-limited race to pick up bonuses). Presents and food items also show up, in a manner similar to that of the original game. Progress can be saved by means of passwords that are presented at specific points.<br /><br />Panic on Funkotron has its fans, but many gamers thought the original Toe Jam & Earl was the better game of the two.<br /><br /><br />Toe Jam & Earl III: Mission To Earth<br />The third game in the series was originally intended for the Sega Dreamcast console, but, after Sega discontinued the Dreamcast, the game was retargeted at the Microsoft Xbox. A three-dimensional platform game, it was released in October 2002. The gameplay is primarily based on that of the original Toe Jam & Earl, though elements from Panic on Funkotron were also included.<br /><br />For the more-capable platform, Toe Jam and Earl were given graphical makeovers; Toe Jam was dressed in a tank top, shorts, and a baseball cap to accompany his gold medallion, while Big Earl's polka-dot Bermuda shorts were replaced by blue denim, and he was given a knit cap. The two characters are joined by Latisha, a blue female insect-like character in blue jeans, a bra top, and gold bangle jewelry. Players may play as any of the three, and may switch between characters in mid-game using the Character Switch Platforms. (Additional playable characters may be downloaded via Xbox Live, as well as additional levels.)<br /><br />The three are called upon by Lamont, the Funkopotamus (ruler of Funkotron and source of all Funk), to retrieve the twelve Sacred Albums of Funk, which have been stolen and hidden on Earth. As with the original Toe Jam & Earl, a variety of Earthlings stand in the way, many of which have carried over from the first two games. To fight against them, the player can use "funk powers" (as in Panic on Funkotron) such as Funk-Fu, a short-range energy blast, and Funkify Notes, which can be launched at enemies from a distance, to "funkify" the Earthlings and render them harmless. Presents and food items, many of which carry over from Toe Jam & Earl as well, are available to assist or hinder the player. The rhythm-matching from Panic on Funkotron also makes an appearance, in the form of Funk Rhythm, which funkifies nearby Earthlings or gives the player bonus points for matching rhythms by pressing the controller's buttons.<br /><br />The levels, instead of being arranged in a linear fashion, are grouped into five zones, and accessed by collecting keys scattered throughout the levels. Each zone contains its own set of levels, as well as minigames in which the player must compete against the clock to win bonuses. The gates between zones are opened through special minigames, which must be accessed by collecting karaoke microphones, each of which requires the completion of a mission in one of the levels to acquire. Gradually, however, a more critical purpose is revealed, through cut scenes in which Lamont, in lines reminiscent of Star Wars (such as "I feel a great disturbance in the Funk"), tells the player of the existence of the "Anti-Funk," the game's final boss. Progress through the game is saved to the Xbox console's hard disk drive.<br /><br />Toe Jam & Earl III received mixed reviews in the gaming community. Some reviewers felt it was one of the best platform games available on any console. Others dismissed it as suitable for fans of the original but otherwise relatively pedestrian.<br /><br /><br />Other Appearances<br />Toe Jam and Earl also appeared in Ready-Aim-Tomatoes!, a game packaged with the light gun for the Genesis, which involved Toe Jam fighting off Earthlings by throwing tomatoes.<div class="blogger-post-footer"><img width='1' height='1' src='https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/tracker/11284572-112283877239866603?l=segaroms.blogspot.com'/></div>Murat Alperennoreply@blogger.com95tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-11284572.post-1122838678799199822005-07-31T12:36:00.000-07:002005-07-31T12:37:58.803-07:00Football World Cup video gamesFIFA has licensed Football World Cup video games since 1986, of which only a few were received positively by the critics, but given the popularity of the competition, they all did positively on the market, and the license is one of the most sought-after. Originally in the hands of U.S. Gold, Electronic Arts acquired it in 1997.<br /><br /> <br />World Cup Carnival<br /> <br />C64 versionWorld Cup Carnival, released by U.S. Gold was arguably the worst start a franchise could have. While the license was acquired in time and was carefully planned, internal problems dragged development until it couldn't be completed nowhere near a commercially usable date. As Mexico '86 was coming closer, U.S. Gold decided to acquire the rights of an older game, World Cup Football by Artic, and re-fitting it with the licensing items, marketing it as a revolutionary title. However, this late effort was received with cynicism from everyone in the video game industry: gamers, retailers and reviewers, and started a trend of "less than what was expected" games based on football licenses. It was published on the C64, the ZX Spectrum and the Amstrad CPC.<br /><br /><br />Italia '90<br />There are three games named after the 1990 World Cup, all of which seemingly had the rights to display both official logos and Ciao, the mascot. One version was developed by U.S. Gold, and is a significant improvement over World Cup Carnival. With some similarities with Tehkan World Cup, the game had all teams present in the competition, and played through a birds' eye view similar to Sensible Soccer. It was released for the Atari ST, ZX Spectrum, C64 and personal computers.<br /><br />The second title was developed by Sega, and has some similarities with the US Gold title, more noticiably the corner and goal kick screens. Teams are mostly based on the Mexico'86 lineups with some changes, and features player selection, with each player having individual ratings. It has a top-down view like Kick Off. Later, it was renamed to World Championship Soccer, and continued to be sold long after the World Cup ended. There is a Master System version with the official teams and calendar of the competition, but with only eight non-selectable players each side and just vertical scroll, but still some of the elements of the 16-bit version made their way into the game.<br /><br />The final, and less known title was developed by Novotrade and published by Virgin Interactive. Unlike the other two titles, World Trophy Soccer was more an arcade game than a serious attempt on simulating the sport: it only had seven players aside, the game only lasted for one half and it followed a fixed playoff tree where the player had to beat all opponents. Because of that, only four teams (Belgium, Italy, Spain and England) could be picked by the player.<br /><br /><br />USA '94<br /> <br />Mega CD coverThe last game in the series by U.S. Gold was also the first to leave some of the mediocracy of previous titles and achieve average reviews. Keeping the same birds' eye view, but with more responsive gameplay, resembling Sensible Soccer, it was ported to most active platforms of the day: DOS, Amiga, Sega Mega Drive/Genesis, Mega CD, Master System, SNES and handhelds Game Boy and Game Gear. The Mega CD version included a CD soundtrack including two songs by the Scorpions and FMV views of 3D renders of the stadiums used in the competition.<br /><br /><br />France '98<br /> <br />PC coverFor the first time in a soccer game, accurate national team kits were introduced complete with kit manufacturer logos and official merchandise. The game engine is basically a remake of the FIFA 98 engine although it features some minor gameplay improvements such as ingame strategy change and more tactically accurate player positioning. And as the FIFA Series, France '98 features a song in the menu. It´s "Tubthumping", by Chumbawamba. The game also features voice-overs by Gary Lineker in the team schedules. The World Cup classic mode is also an interesting feature, with classic black and white sepia-toned graphics and commentary by Kenneth Wolstenholme creating the feeling of watching an old World Cup game. The playable teams also included several nations that did not qualify for the finals, but were considered too important to exclude. It was released for Windows, PSX, Nintendo 64 and Game Boy Color.<br /><br /><br />Korea/Japan '02<br />An amalgamation between the game engines of FIFA 2002 and FIFA 2003, the game still incorporates the power bar for shots and crosses but with a steeper learning curve and higher chances of being penalised by the match referee. The national team kits are accurate along with player likenessess and the stadia of the 2002 World Cup. It was released for Windows, PSX, PlayStation 2, GameCube, Xbox, and Game Boy Advance.<div class="blogger-post-footer"><img width='1' height='1' src='https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/tracker/11284572-112283867879919982?l=segaroms.blogspot.com'/></div>Murat Alperennoreply@blogger.com16tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-11284572.post-1122838410069765122005-07-31T12:32:00.000-07:002005-07-31T12:33:30.070-07:00Zero WingZero Wing is a 1989 Japanese shoot 'em up arcade game developed by Toaplan. Like other shoot 'em ups of the time, it featured no real plot, except to distinguish that the player is a lone hero who will save the universe from bad guys. However, it enjoyed a degree of success in the arcade, and was thus ported to the PC Engine and Sega Mega Drive (Genesis) in 1991.<br /><br /><br />All your base are belong to us<br />The reason for Zero Wing's popularity beyond its release as an arcade game and video game is due to the additions made to the European Mega Drive version. To expand on the game's plot, an introductory cutscene was added to the game. This introductory scene was poorly translated to English for the European release, with one clip reading: "All your base are belong to us. You have no chance to survive make your time!" The intro does not appear in the arcade version.<br /><br />In 1999, Zero Wing's Engrish intro was re-discovered by members of OverClocked Remix, culminating in the wildly successful "All your base are belong to us" memetic phenomenon. This also popularized the introductory and level 1 background music by Tatsuya Uemura.<br /><br />The console version of Zero Wing was released in North America for the Sega Genesis (Mega Drive) and the arcade version was distributed by Williams Electronics.<br /><br /><br />Gameplay<br />As per other shooters, the aim of the game is to shoot all other enemies that appear on screen and avoid crashing into bullets, enemies, or foreground scenery. There are mid-level and end-of-level boss enemies that stay with the player until they are defeated.<br /><br />The player, a "Zig" fighter ship, has several ways to attack:<br /><br />Using The main cannon: scatter-shot (red weapon), lasers (blue weapon) or homing missiles (green weapon). <br />Ramming smaller enemies with the little extra ships that appear above and below the ZIG. <br />Grabbing a smaller enemy and throwing it at another enemy, similar to the Kirby games. <br />Releasing the spherical front shield once it is collected, like in R-Type. <br />Soon after starting, the player encounters power-up ships. If shot, they leave behind power-ups. These run in the sequence of the red weapon, blue weapon, green weapon, and speed-up. There is also an occasional shield power-up, which attaches to the front of the ship. Once the first weapon power-up is collected, two small ships appear above and below the ZIG, and follow its exacting movements. These extra ships are impervious and can be used as shields. As they occasionally move nearer the ZIG when blocked by large enemies or foreground scenery, they can serve as a warning to the player that they should move carefully to avoid a collision.<br /><br />Each of the three main weapons has three power levels. Each time the same weapon is collected, the power level increases. If a different weapon is collected, it starts back on level 1 power, unless level 3 power was already attained previously. There are also two special powerups, one in level 1-1 and one in level 4-3, which increase all weapons to a special, otherwise unattainable level 4. In the intro scenes, the ZIG's windows are green. In the game, the windows change color depending on what weapon the player has<div class="blogger-post-footer"><img width='1' height='1' src='https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/tracker/11284572-112283841006976512?l=segaroms.blogspot.com'/></div>Murat Alperennoreply@blogger.com9tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-11284572.post-1122838297429220112005-07-31T12:31:00.000-07:002005-07-31T12:31:37.430-07:00Zombies Ate My NeighborsZombies Ate My Neighbors is a shooter-style video game for the Super Nintendo and Genesis gaming systems. The game was produced by LucasArts as a comical tribute to both classic and schlocky horror films of the 1950s and 1960s. In some English-speaking countries the name was considered unsuitable, and so it was renamed, simply, "Zombies". The crazed guys with chainsaws and hockey masks were replaced with lumberjacks with axes, and levels such as "Chainsaw Hedgemaze Mayhem" were renamed to suit.<br /><br />Gameplay<br /> <br />Zombies Ate My Neighbors title screenThe player chooses between two teenage characters, Zeke and his sister Julie, both of whom can be controlled in multiplayer mode. They navigate suburban neighborhoods, shopping malls, pyramids, and other areas, destroying all variety of horror-movie monsters, including vampires, werewolves, huge demonic babies, and the game's flagship, zombies. In each of the 45 stages the goal is to rescue all surviving neighbors, at which point a magical door takes the player to the next stage. If all of the neighbors survived the player also gains an extra life.<br /><br />The weapons are wild and wonderful. The most normal weapon is a bazooka, which can break through cracked walls and shoddy hedges but the firing recoil throws the user several paces backwards, but most weapons are footballs, cutlery, plates, Martian bubble guns, popsicles (originally bananas in the "Monsters" beta version), tomatoes, soda cans, and so forth.<br /><br />The player also has a variety of secondary items available; these include inflatable clowns, Pandora's Boxes, health kits. Most interesting are the monster potions; there are a variety of transformations available depending on the potion's colour. The player can become intangible (able to walk on water and straight through enemies to save the neighbors), or turn into a big purple Hulk-like monster (indestructible and immensely strong, but cannot swim or use trampolines). The potion with a question mark is the most dangerous. It can give the effects of the other potions, or heal them, or hurt them, or even make them turn into a zombie, no longer controlled by the player but instead wandering aimlessly. If they come near a neighbor in this state they rush over and kill them!<br /><br />The game makes several references to horror movies, including An American Werewolf in London, Child's Play, Dracula, Night of the Living Dead, Creature from the Black Lagoon and Tremors.<br /><br />There was a sequel, Ghoul Patrol, but it lacked the heart of the original and opted for more realistic graphics and monsters, and is considered by many to have killed the series off.<div class="blogger-post-footer"><img width='1' height='1' src='https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/tracker/11284572-112283829742922011?l=segaroms.blogspot.com'/></div>Murat Alperennoreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-11284572.post-1122838233783779722005-07-31T12:30:00.000-07:002005-08-02T02:03:53.980-07:00Worms<a href="http://photos1.blogger.com/blogger/5174/334/1600/300px-Worms_World_Party_screenshot.jpg"><img style="float:left; margin:0 10px 10px 0;cursor:pointer; cursor:hand;" src="http://photos1.blogger.com/blogger/5174/334/320/300px-Worms_World_Party_screenshot.jpg" border="0" alt="" /></a><br />Worms World PartyWorms is a series of turn-based computer games with the common theme of players each controlling a small platoon of worms across a two-dimensional (and, in more recent games, three-dimensional), deformable landscape. The series is decidedly tongue-in-cheek, typified by cartoon-style graphics and an eclectic and bizarre set of weapons. Worms is part of a wider genre of turn-based games in which each player controls characters who duel with projectile weapons; predecessors include Scorched Earth and Gorilla. The game, whose concept was devised by Andy Davidson, is thought to have been inspired by Lemmings, with which it shares many similarities.<br /><br />Contents <br />1 Games in the series <br />2 The game <br />3 Weapons and tools <br />4 Online play <br />4.1 Battle Race <br />4.2 Bazookas and Grenades <br />4.3 Capture the Flag <br />4.4 Elite <br />4.5 Fort <br />4.6 Rope Race <br />4.7 Roper <br />4.8 Shopper <br />5 External links <br /> <br /><br /><br /><br />Games in the series<br />The Worms series consists of, in order of production, the original Worms game, Worms Reinforcements, Worms & Reinforcements United, Worms: Director's Cut, Worms 2, Worms Armageddon, Worms World Party, Worms 3D, Worms Forts: Under Siege, and Worms 4 : Mayhem, as well as a number of smaller spin-offs including Worms Pinball and Worms Blast. The game was originally a fan project, created with a cut-down version of Blitz BASIC given away with an issue of Amiga Format magazine. It later evolved into a full commercial game, developed by Team 17 originally for the Commodore Amiga computer. These games have been released regularly since the mid-1990s, and are available for Windows and Mac based computers, Amiga systems, Sega Dreamcast, Nintendo 64, Nintendo Game Boy and Game Boy Advance, Nintendo GameCube, Nokia N-Gage, SNES, Sony PlayStation , Sega Saturn, and PlayStation 2, Microsoft Xbox and possibly others.<br /><br />During the development of Worms 2, Andy Davidson wrote Worms - The Director's Cut, an exclusive special edition produced exclusively for the Amiga. This was, to his eyes, the pinnacle of the series. Featuring weapons not seen in any Worms game before or since, it looks like an enhanced version of the original game. Although many die-hard fans feel it is the best Worms game ever made, only 5000 copies were ever sold.<br /><br />In 2003, Worms 3D was released. This was the first game in the series to bring the annelid characters into a three-dimensional environment. It features an innovative poxel engine, described as a hybrid of polygons and voxels (the 3-D analogues of pixels). This allows for pseudo-realistic terrain deformation similar in style to the 2-D games, in which the terrain was represented by a bitmap.<br /><br />The latest complete game in the series is Worms Forts: Under Siege, for PlayStation 2, Xbox and PC. It was released in November 2004 and features the biggest variation on the gameplay that the series has yet to see. Rather than fighting only worms on a fully destructible land, your worms are able to build forts. The object of the game has changed from only killing the worms, as you can now win a game by destroying the opponent's fort.<br /><br />Worms 4: Mayhem will be released in mid-late 2005, aiming to be a revamp of the original Worms 3D engine, featuring smoother terrain deformation and making extensive use of cel-shading techniques. The gameplay will be much the same as it was in Worms 3D, but new gameplay modes will be introduced.<br /><br />Two new 2D Worms games, one for Nintendo DS, the other for Sony PSP, have been announced to be in production. Both will be specifically designed for the handheld systems. No release date is currently set.<br /><br /><br /><br /><br />The game<br />Each player controls a team of several worms. During the course of the game, players take it in turns to select one of their worms and use whatever tools and weapons are available to kill the opponents' worms and win the game. Worms may move around the terrain in a variety of ways, some requiring particular tools such as the "Bungee" and "Ninja Rope". Each turn is time-limited to ensure that players do not hold up the game with excessive thinking or moving.<br /><br />Over fifty weapons and tools may be available, but games are usually played with a reduced and thus less complicated arsenal, the settings for which are often saved into a "scheme" for easy selection in future games. Over time players have developed and refined a large number of very different and unusual schemes that do not always stick to the traditional worms gameplay.<br /><br />Other scheme settings allow reinforcement crates to be deployed, from which additional weapons can be obtained; "Sudden Death" whereby the game is rushed to a conclusion after a time limit expires; and the inclusion of terrain objects such as land mines and explosive barrels.<br /><br />Most weapons, when used, cause explosions that deform the terrain, removing chunks. The landscape is an island floating on a large body of water, or a restricted cave with water at the bottom. A worm dies when it enters the water (either by falling off the island, or through a hole in the bottom of it), or when its health is reduced to zero by, most commonly, contact with explosions.<br /><br /><br />Weapons and tools<br />Main article: Worms weapons and tools<br /><br />A feature that makes Worms known among many gamers is its wide variety of weapons. As new versions are released, new weapons are added to the collection, and very few are removed, if any. As a result, newer games offer about 50 weapons.<br /><br />Since Worms Armageddon, weapons that were intended to aid as utilities rather than damage-dealers (though some of them can also be used to deal damage when used in certain ways) were classified as tools. This classification mainly differs in the fact that they don't fall in ordinary weapon crates, and instead appear on toolboxes.<br /><br /><br />Online play<br />In Worms Armageddon and Worms World Party, and all future games of the Worms series, there is a feature called WormNET that allows players to compete over the Internet, using a Metaserver. There are a variety of unusual schemes that have been developed and refined by the WormNET community that are often played instead of the official schemes created by the original developer of the game. Some schemes have "rules" that are not enforced by the game itself, but are expected to be followed by players for the purposes of playability.<br /><br />For reference purposes aimed at new players already familiar with the game in general, these schemes are described here (victory requires destruction of all opponents unless otherwise stated):<br /><br /><br />Battle Race<br />In Battle Race (BR) The terrain resembles a maze and is indestructible (unaffected in any way by use of weaponry). The object of the game is not to kill the opponents' worms but to be the first player to move your worm from the "Start" to the "Finish", which often takes many turns. The Start and Finish denote small regions of the terrain, normally marked by S and F respectively, formed out of the terrain itself. At the beginning of the game all players must place their worm, and do so by clicking in the Start region. The game ends when a player reaches the Finish, and all other players are obliged to surrender.<br /><br /><br />Bazookas and Grenades<br />With the Bazookas and Grenades (BnG) scheme you are allowed only to use bazookas and grenades, and some close combat weapons, to attack the enemy. "Anchoring" is a common setting in this scheme, whereby the worms are denied movement unless through the use of a tool such as "Blowtorch" or "Teleport", which the player is limited to a small allocation of each. A common rule in BnG is "no baking"/"no sitting" (among other names). This means a player cannot use the 5 second fuse on the grenade; more specifically, the player cannot drop a grenade next to the opponent and allow the fuse to burn down - the grenade must explode before it comes to a rest.<br /><br /><br />Capture the Flag<br />Capture the Flag (CTF) is a variation of the Fort scheme (see below). In this variation, victory can also be achieved by destroying the opponent's "flag", usually a small icon drawn into the terrain.<br /><br /><br />Elite<br />Elites are standard games similar to the default intermediate scheme which are usually played 1v1. The difference is that there is a higher degree of skill and strategy required due to only 20 seconds per turn. There are no rules, but other noticeable differences in the set scheme include the placing of worms at the start of the game, instant mines and the rapid water increase in sudden death.<br /><br /><br />Fort<br />Players are divided up into two teams. Each team places their worms on a pre-decided side of the terrain, which is normally fashioned to resemble two castles with a body of water between them. Invading the opponent's fort by sending a worm to the other side is normally forbidden, as is "fishing" whereby crates on a team's fort are stolen by the enemy.<br /><br /><br />Rope Race<br />Rope Race (RR) is essentially a Battle Race, but with all weapons disabled and only "Ninja Rope" at your disposal. You place your worm or worms at the location marked Start. Attacking (knocking) other worms is a cow. Try to keep your parachute active, so you do not lose your turn if you fall. To win, get your worm to the location marked Finish, or in some games, there and back. If you have two worms, you can win either by getting both to Finish, or one there and back.<br /><br /><br />Roper<br />Ropers (aka "Propers" or "ProRopers") are popular games in which a cavern terrain is used to stage a display of considerable skill with use of the "Ninja Rope", where players attempt to kill each other by launching Land Mines, Bazookas and Grenades from the Ninja Rope after first collecting a crate (this collection is compulsory and abbreviated as the "CBA" rule (Collect Before Attack/Crate Before Attack)) Attacking a player in last position (i.e. lowest total health) is forbidden by the "ABL" rule (All But Last) unless other players' worms are also injured in the same attack (the "Piles" rule).<br /><br /><br />Shopper<br />Shopper (aka "Shoppa") games utilize the CBA, ABL, and AFR (Attack From Rope) rules. Players attack from a rope if the weapon is compatible, and it's required that players attack each other with whatever weapons they can collect from crates. Variations of this are W2W (Wall to Wall), in which players are required to have their worm touch both walls of the map or other designated walls before attacking. Newer variations of W2W include W3W, W4W, W5W, W6W and sometimes more. Another variation is "Fly Shoppa", in which the map contains a large obstacle in the center over which players must "fly" by launching their worms from ropes, soaring to the other side before being allowed to attack. The Shopper game has unique maps, usually of a cityscape. One of the first maps to start this trend was "City Shopping 2001", by a player called Dogma. The "City Shopping 2002" map, also by Dogma, became one of the most well-known maps in the game, for its excellent design, hiding holes, and pitfalls.<div class="blogger-post-footer"><img width='1' height='1' src='https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/tracker/11284572-112283823378377972?l=segaroms.blogspot.com'/></div>Murat Alperennoreply@blogger.com23tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-11284572.post-1122838131174278282005-07-31T12:27:00.000-07:002005-08-02T13:09:37.566-07:00Thunder Force<a href="http://photos1.blogger.com/blogger/5174/334/1600/180px-Tforce2game.jpg"><img style="float:right; margin:0 0 10px 10px;cursor:pointer; cursor:hand;" src="http://photos1.blogger.com/blogger/5174/334/320/180px-Tforce2game.jpg" border="0" alt="" /></a><br />Thunder Force (also spelled Thunderforce) is a series of scrolling shooter type video games developed by the Japanese software company Technosoft (a.k.a. Tecno Soft). The games are known by fans of the genre for their hardcore appeal, pleasing graphics (for their time), and generally well composed Synth-rock based soundtracks.<br /><br />The Thunder Force games have appeared on the Sega Megadrive/Genesis, Sega Saturn, Super Famicom/SNES, Sony Playstation, and Arcade gaming platforms. They have also appeared on the Sharp X1, Sharp X68000, Sharp MZ-1500, NEC PC-8801 mkII, NEC PC-9801, NEC PC-6001 mkII, and Fujitsu FM-7 computer systems.<br /><br />The series currently consists of five games:<br /><br /><br />Note: Since Thunder Force II through V have multiple difficulty and gameplay settings, the following sections are written under the assumption that the games are operating on their DEFAULT settings.<br /><br /><br /><br /><br />Contents [hide]<br />1 Thunder Force <br />2 Thunder Force II <br />3 Thunder Force III <br />4 Thunder Force IV <br />5 Thunder Force V <br />6 Other notes <br />6.1 Gold Packs <br />6.2 Thunder Force VI? <br />6.3 Trivia <br />7 External Related Links <br />8 References <br /> <br /><br /><br /><br />Thunder Force<br /> <br />Thunder Force <br />Thunder Force (in game)Thunder Force was released in late 1983 exclusively in Japan. Known versions of it exist on the following Japanese based computers: Sharp X1, Sharp MZ-1500, NEC PC-6001 mkII, NEC PC-8801 mkII, and Fujitsu FM-7. In 1984, an add-on was released named Thunder Force Construction for the Fujitsu FM-7, and NEC PC-9801 computers. The add-on allowed players to create custom made areas.<br /><br />For the most part, the setting of the Thunder Force games (excluding the fifth) are centered around the war between the "Milky Way Galaxy Federation" (good guys), and the "ORN Empire" (bad guys). In the first Thunder Force, the ORN Empire has built a large fortress named the Dyradeizer to oppose the Galaxy Federation. In addition to its high firepower capabilities, Dyradeizer is supported by shield generators hidden in various locations by ORN, which render the fortress invisible. In retaliation, the Galaxy Federation sends their specially designed fighter, the Fire Leo, to destroy the shield generators and reveal and destroy Dyradeizer.<br /><br />The structure of the game consists of overhead, free-directional scrolling areas and the player's ship is armed with main shot to shoot airborne targets and a bomb shot to shoot ground enemies. Gameplay consists of flying the Fire Leo over ORN occupied areas while destroying enemy base installations and turrets. Each area has a certain number of shield generators hidden under the ground based enemy targets; in order for an area to be completed, the shield generators must be found and destroyed. After doing so, the Dyradeizer will temporally appear, giving the player a chance to cause damage to it. Once a few minutes have passed, the Dyradeizer will disappear and the player will be taken to the next area to repeat the process.<br /><br />Graphic and sound wise, Thunder Force is very crude and modest compared to its successors, and is the most obscure game of the series (at least from a non-Japanese perspective).<br /><br /><br />Thunder Force II<br /> <br />Thunder Force II <br />Thunder Force II (in game)Thunder Force II was first released in Japan during 1988 for the Sharp X68000 computer. A year later, it was ported to the Sega Megadrive/Genesis game console and released in Japan (under the name Thunder Force II MD), Europe, and the United States.<br /><br />Soon after Thunder Force, the ORN Empire creates a powerful new battleship, the Plealos (a.k.a Preareos). Using this battleship, ORN once again attacks the Galaxy Federation. The outcome of the attacks result in the destruction of the Galaxy Federation affiliated planet of Reda, and heavy destruction on the planet Nepura (a.k.a. Nebula), which ORN eventually captures from the Galaxy Federation. Eventually, the Galaxy Federation learns that ORN houses Plealos deep below Nebula's surface when not in use and takes the opportunity to plan an operation to take it down. They send the next iteration of their "Fire Leo" series fighter craft, Fire Leo 2 "Exceliza", to destroy ORN bases on Nepura and eventually find and destroy Plealos.<br /><br />Stages in the game were split into two formats: The free-directional scrolling, overhead stage format from the previous game (referred to in game as "top-view stages"), and horizontal, forward-scrolling, R-Type-esque stages (referred to as "side-view" stages). Each stage begins in the top-view perspective, where the player has to locate the cores of a certain number of major enemy bases and destroy them. After this is accomplished, the stage continues from the side-view perspective, which plays like a traditional horizontal scrolling shooter. After the boss of the side-view sub stage is defeated, the player moves on the next stage.<br /><br />Building upon its predecessor, Thunder Force II introduced a weapon system that would become the staple for the rest of the series. The player's ship now has default arsenal of weapons which include a twin, forward firing shot(the "Twin" shot), a single forward, and single backward firing shot(the "Back" shot), and a bomb shot in the top-view stages. By collecting certain items, the default weapons can be upgraded to more a powerful level. Also, the player could obtain a certain number of new weapons with various unique abilities by collecting the weapon's corresponding item (the "Hunter", a signature weapon of Thunder Force, debuts in this game). Once obtained, the weapons can be switched between at the player's desire, but once the ship is destroyed, all weapons would be unequipped except for the defaults. Because of this, it is advantageous for the player to prolong survival. The top-view and the side-view stages have different sets of weapons; losing weapons in the top-view stages do not affect the weapons equipped in the side-view stages and vise versa.<br /><br />Thunder Force II also introduced the CRAW add-ons. (Also commonly referred to as CLAW, causing some confusion as to what is the proper term.) The function of the CRAWs is to circle the ship and block (weak) incoming bullets and also to provide extra firepower by firing single, normal shots. The player could collect up to two CRAW's at a time, but will lose the CRAWs upon ship destruction. Exclusive to this game is an item which temporally increases their orbit speed, making them more likely to block bullets.<br /><br />The X68000 version of the game has slightly better visuals than its Megadrive/Genesis counterpart. For example, some of the top-view oriented stage backgrounds have parallax scrolling/transparency effects which the Megadrive/Genesis version lacks. This can be most readily be seen from the water in the first top-view stage. The X68000 version has clearer voice samples, including extra voice effects such as the "Shit!" exclamation heard after player's last life is lost. The X68000 version also has an introduction sequence, and a top-view stage and side-view stage that is not found in the Megadrive/Genesis version. Finally, both versions have a few weapons unique from each other (for instance, "Sidewinder" in the X68000 version corresponds to "Nova" in the Genesis version).<br /><br /><br />Thunder Force III<br /> <br />Thunder Force III <br />Thunder Force III (in game)Thunder Force III was released in 1990 in Japan, Europe, and the United States for the Sega Megadrive/Genesis game console. During the same year, it was retooled into an Arcade game and released in Japan, Europe, and the United States as Thunder Force AC. In 1991, Thunder Force AC was ported to the Super Famicom/SNES, renamed Thunder Spirits. This port was released in Japan and the United States.<br /><br />The setting of Thunder Force III takes place about 100 years after Thunder Force. Apparently, despite their successes, the Galaxy Federation has not been faring well in their battle against the ORN Empire. ORN has installed cloaking devices on five major planets in their space territory that conceal their main base, making it difficult for the Galaxy Federation to locate and attack their headquarters. In addition, ORN has built a remote defense system to protect itself named "Cerberus", which is especially efficient at neutralizing large ships and fleets. Knowing this, the Galaxy Federation creates the Fire Leo 3 "Styx"; a craft small enough to not be detected by Cerberus, yet equipped with the firepower of a large starfighter. The Galaxy Federation send Styx on a mission to destroy the five cloaking devices, infiltrate ORN's headquarters, and destroy ORN's emperor, the bio computer "Cha Os".<br /><br />For Thunder Force III, the free-directional, overhead stage format featured in the previous two games is removed and replaced entirely by the horizontally aligned stage format. The horizontal format becomes the new standard for the following games. Gameplay wise, among the five major planets the player will travel to (Hydra, Gorgon, Seiren, Haides, and Ellis), the game let's the player choose which planet to start on. After the first five stages are completed, the game continues for a few more stages.<br /><br />The weapon system from Thunder Force II returns in this game with some modifications. Some weapons from Thunder Force II are reused or modified slightly (the enhanceable Twin shot and Back shot remain the defaults), while others are completely new and exclusive to the game. This time, when the player's ship is destroyed, only the weapon that was currently in use is lost (unless it is a default weapon of course). CRAWs also make their return and have the same behavior and functions, except now when the player collects the CRAW item, the ship automatically receives its maximum two CRAWs (again, CRAWs are lost upon ship destruction). Also, when using most weapons, the CRAWs will mimic the ship and fire the same weapon (similar to the Options in Gradius). The final new addition is that the player's ship now has a speed setting, which can be increased or decreased across four levels at the press of a button.<br /><br />The main difference between Thunder Force III and Thunder Force AC is that the "Haides" and "Ellis" stages in Thunder Force III are removed and replaced with entirely different stages in Thunder Force AC. Thunder Force AC also removed the option to choose a starting stage, as the game always begins on the planet Hydra. Besides these changes, both versions play about the same.<br /><br /><br />Thunder Force IV<br /> <br />Thunder Force IV <br />Thunder Force IV (in game)Thunder Force IV was released in 1992 for the Sega Megadrive/Sega Genesis in Japan, Europe, and the United States (published by Sega under the name Lightening Force: Quest for the Darkstar).<br /><br />Taking place directly after Thunder Force III, the ORN Empire is thought to be defeated by the Galaxy Federation, but still suffers from increasingly frequent attacks from hostile forces. The forces are discovered to be the "Vios", an army made up of allies and residual forces of ORN. The Galaxy Federation discovers the location of their headquarters on the planet Aceria and attacks, but since the power of Vios has grown greater than the previous ORN Empire, the Galaxy Federation forces are initially defeated. Once again, they develop a new small yet powerful fighter spacecraft, the Fire Leo 4 "Rynex" to eliminate Vios.<br /><br />The game format is mostly unchanged from the previous game (horizontally oriented and forward scrolling). However, many of the stages now stretch beyond the height of a TV screen, which allow the player more space to maneuver and dodge incoming fire. Also, the player now has the option choosing the play order of the first four stages, instead of just the starting stage like in Thunder Force III.<br /><br />The weapon system is also similar to Thunder Force III. Featuring the same upgradeable defaults, and unique extra weapons that are either exclusive, or were in previous games (modified or not). Again, upon ship destruction, the weapon currently being used is lost sans the defaults. Naturally, the CRAWs return, and basically have the exact same function as their 'Thunder Force III counterparts. Like before, the maximum two CRAWs are received upon picking up the CRAW item and lost upon ship destruction. The speed setting also returns, although it is represented by a percent gauge from zero (lowest speed) to one-hundred (highest speed). Tapping the speed button will increase speed by 25 percent and holding it down will increase speed gradually by one percent.<br /><br />The most significant addition to the ship arsenal is the "Thunder Sword", a very powerful lightning based frontal attack. At the game's halfway point, the ship receives an add-on part which enables the use of the Thunder Sword. From here, the one requirement of using the Thunder Sword is that the ship be equipped with CRAWs. When the ship is not firing any weapons, a charging noise is heard (followed by a chime when fully charged) and the CRAWs will appear to be surrounded with electricity. The next press of the fire button will discharge the Thunder Sword. The blast is stronger if charged longer and is at its strongest when fully charged.<br /><br /><br /><br /><br /><br />Thunder Force V<br /> <br />Thunder Force V <br />Thunder Force V (in game)Thunder Force V was initially released in 1997 exclusively in Japan for the Sega Saturn with two retail versions, the normal pack which was just a standard release, and a special pack which contained a remix music CD of various Thunder Force series music (entitled Best of Thunderforce). In 1998, Thunder Force V was ported to the Sony Playstation in Japan and released as Thunder Force V: Perfect System. Shortly afterward, the PlayStation port was released in the United States via Working Designs.<br /><br />Spoiler warning: Plot and/or ending details follow.<br />The setting of Thunder Force V takes us away from the conflict between the Galaxy Federation and the ORN Empire and brings us to Earth in the future. At the very end of Thunder Force IV, the pilots of Fire Leo 4 "Rynex" were forced to eject from their ship due to a massive explosion caused by the destruction of their final target. The explosion damaged Rynex severely, but the remains of Rynex floated throughout space for some time until it was discovered by Earthlings. Upon analyzing Rynex, the Earthlings discover the technology Rynex (at this point, Rynex is renamed "Vasteel" by Earthlings and its creators are called "Vastians") is composed of is far more advanced than anything they had ever seen. Therefore, Earth scientists use the Vastian technology to build an island called Babel controlled by super computer named the "Guardian". Babel's purpose is to build ships, weapons, and devices that could utilize, or even enhance the capabilities of Vastian technology. However, a malfunction in the Guardian caused it to turn against Earthlings and use the devices it created to attack them, causing devastating causalities. In order to save themselves, the Earthlings built high-powered attack crafts that can replicate and/or enhance the abilities of the original Vasteel (called "RVR's" or "Refined Vasteel Replicas") and organize a strike force to take down the Guardian. The player takes control of a RVR-01 "Gauntlet", and later, a RVR-02B "Brigandine" and RVR-02 "Vambrace" to help accomplish this goal.<br /><br />The stage format has the same horizontally aligned orientation of previous games and only stretch to the size of a TV screen as in Thunder Force III. The biggest change in the look of the game is the use of three dimensional polygons to model the game sprites and some of the scenery (instead of the two dimensional sprites in previous games). This change gives the appearance of 3-D objects scrolling against a 2-D backgrounds, which is commonly referred to as a "2.5-D" effect. Like in Thunder Force IV, the player can choose the play order of the starting stages, but now only the first three stages can be manipulated in this manner. The same speed gauge from Thunder Force IV is used, and is operated the same way.<br /><br />The only difference between the weapon system of this game from Thunder Force III and IV is that there are not longer any items to enhance your default weapons (Twin shot and Back shot). Instead, they are automatically enhanced at a later point in the game and the enhanced versions become your new defaults. All the weapons have appeared in previous Thunder Force games, but a few have been changed radically (such as the "Free Range" weapon that was originally in Thunder Force IV.<br /><br />The CRAWs have a few changes from previous games. They still rotate around the player's ship, absorb enemy fire, and act extra turrets for you weapons, but now a maximum of three CRAW's can be collected at a time. In addition, they remain on screen for a finite period of time upon ship destruction, giving the player a chance to recollect them.<br /><br />A new feature in Thunder Force V involving the CRAWs is the use of the "Over Weapon". By pressing the appropriate button, the player's CRAWs will combine with the currently selected weapon to create a more powerful version of that weapon. Over Weapons can only be sustained for a limited period of time by using CRAW energy. As an Over Weapon is used, the CRAW will shrink in size and gradually change color from blue to red, indicating its energy is being depleted. Once all CRAW energy is depleted, an Over Weapon can no longer be used. CRAWs will recharge their energy automatically over time when not being used for firing the Over Weapon. Also, collecting new CRAWs will replace the player's existing CRAWs if they are depleted. If a CRAW is red, it will be destroyed by the next bullet it absorbs.<br /><br />Graphically, the Saturn version of Thunder Force V is superior, as it features special effects not present in its PlayStation counterpart. A good comparison of the differences can be found in Stage 3 "Human Road", in which some extra graphical touches found in the Saturn game were removed when ported to the Playstation. However, the Playstation version features extra artwork, CG rendered movie sequences, game modes, and other easter eggs that the Saturn version lacks. As far as gameplay, the games have minor, if any, differences.<br /><br /><br />Other notes<br /><br />Gold Packs<br />In 1996, Technosoft released the "Thunder Force Gold Packs" for the Sega Saturn exclusively in Japan, which contained re-releases of previous Thunder Force games. Two packs were released: Thunder Force Gold Pack 1 which included Thunder Force II and Thunder Force III, and Thunder Force Gold Pack 2 which included Thunder Force IV and Thunder Force AC. Each Gold Pack disc has exclusive CG animated introduction sequences and a few extra easter eggs, but the actual games remained mostly unchanged (although the slowdown present in the Megadrive/Genesis version of Thunder Force IV is removed in its Gold Pack version).<br /><br /><br />Thunder Force VI?<br />A video was made in 2000 which circulated on the Internet showing the intro sequence for Thunder Force VI. This video serves as evidence that Thunder Force VI was at one time being developed for the Sega Dreamcast console. <br />In 2001, a video game music album was released from the band "Noise" entitled Broken Thunder: Noise Image Soundtrack Volume 3 featuring music intended to be used in Thunder Force VI. The soundtrack is composed by Tsukumo Haykutarou, Noise band member and music composer for many of Technosoft's games (including Thunder Force V). <br />Internet rumors have been floating around that Technosoft, who has not been heard from since the early 2000s, are currently rehiring staff and planning to release Thunder Force VI in the fiscal year of 2006 for an unnamed game system. <br /><br />Trivia<br />The name "Thunder Force" comes from the project name the Galaxy Federation uses for the development of their Fire Leo series of small yet powerful spacecraft, which are then used for concentrated offensive operations against the ORN Empire. In Thunder Force V, the name is used (as "Thunder Force 222") to describe the Earthling strike team that fights against the Guardian computer. <br />The "Leo" portion of Fire Leo apparently stands for Little, Eternal, Operation as seen in the Thunder Force VI intro video (unsure what the meaning behind this acronym is).<div class="blogger-post-footer"><img width='1' height='1' src='https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/tracker/11284572-112283813117427828?l=segaroms.blogspot.com'/></div>Murat Alperennoreply@blogger.com19tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-11284572.post-1122838015270681842005-07-31T12:23:00.000-07:002005-07-31T12:26:55.273-07:00SyndicateSyndicate computer games<br /><br />The Syndicate series was a series of violent isometric science fiction computer games created by Bullfrog Productions. There were two main titles in the series: Syndicate (1993/1994) and Syndicate Wars (1996), with an expansion pack for the former, Syndicate: American Revolt.<br /><br />Syndicate was released for the following platforms:<br /><br />Amiga <br />PC <br />Mac, <br />SNES <br />Mega Drive <br />3DO <br />Atari Jaguar <br />The expansion pack was available for the Amiga and PC, while the sequel, Syndicate Wars, was a PC and PlayStation only title, due to the significantly more demanding graphics engine, a heavily modified version of which was used in Dungeon Keeper.<br /><br />The series was critically acclaimed, but reached the peak of its popularity before mass adoption of the internet, hence a relatively small online community compared to later less influential games.<br /><br />Both games put you in charge of a player-named corporation - also issued was a wide choice of symbolic, simplistic logo. Syndicate Wars also provides a second playable entity, the Church of the New Epoch. Gameplay involves ordering a 4-man (or woman) team of cyborg agents around gritty cyberpunk-themed cities, in pursuit of mission goals such as assassinating executives of a rival syndicate, rescuing captured allies, "persuading" civilians and scientists to join your company, demolishing buildings, or simply killing all enemy agents. You were also required to collect the funds to finance the R&D of new weaponry and cyborg upgrades, by means of taxing conquered territories in the original game, or robbing banks in Syndicate Wars. Unlike some games, which either punish the player for civilian deaths or reward him for violent actions committed, Syndicate remains ambivalent.<br /><br />The Syndicate series, particularly Syndicate Wars, was noted for its attention to detail and the intricacy of its narrative. Notable features of both games were the use of context-sensitive background music which changed to suit the mood of the on-screen action, and a high degree of interactivity, in that many objects in the first game and nearly every object in the second game could be destroyed. The visual aesthetic of both games borrows heavily from films such as Akira and Blade Runner.<div class="blogger-post-footer"><img width='1' height='1' src='https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/tracker/11284572-112283801527068184?l=segaroms.blogspot.com'/></div>Murat Alperennoreply@blogger.com2tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-11284572.post-1122837649105665982005-07-31T12:19:00.000-07:002005-08-02T06:46:53.106-07:00Sonic 3D BlastThis article is about the Sega Genesis/Sega Saturn/PC game. For the Game Gear game, see Sonic Blast. <br />Sonic 3D Blast (alternatively Sonic 3D: Flickies' Island, or according to the minimized PC version, Sonic 3D Blast: Flickies' Island) is a platform game in the Sonic the Hedgehog series that appeared in several different platforms. The game was developed by Traveller's Tales instead of the traditional developer Sonic Team.<br /><br />The game was released in Europe for the Sega Mega Drive in November 1996. The Sega Genesis version was released in North America later that month. The game was released on the Sega Saturn in North America in the very same month to make up for the cancellation of Sonic X-treme (which had been intended as the Saturn's killer app for the 1996 holiday season); the game was literally ported in a month with FMVs, highly spruced up graphics (including an all 3D special stage, considered by many fans to be the best special stage in the series) and an entirely new, Red Book audio soundtrack by Richard Jacques (who would later also produce the soundtrack for Sonic R). It was then released in Europe for the Saturn in February 1997. The Saturn version of the game was released for the PC in North America in September 1997, with the videos and soundtrack intact, as well as the notable addition of a save feature, but lacking some of the Saturn's effects (like the fog in Rusty Ruins) and a dumbed-down special stage, using sprites from the Genesis version but with the basic concept of the Saturn version. The PC version came to Europe on September 25, 1997. Finally, the game came out for the Saturn in Japan on October 14, 1999 (the same date that Sonic Adventure International was released in Japan).<br /><br />The game places Sonic in an isometric projection view in a de facto 2D environment. He must collect Flickies and bring them to the big warp ring in order to advance in a zone. Each zone consists of 3 acts. There are 10 or 15 Flickies to rescue in Acts 1 and 2 (barring Panic Puppet). In Act 3 of each zone, you face Dr. Eggman in one of his machines.<br /><br />The ROM used on both sides of the pond is exactly the same. The title differs depending on which country the game is in. In North America, the title is Sonic 3D Blast. In Europe, the title is Sonic 3D: Flickies' Island. The European title was used in Japan. The PC version, if minimized (for instance, if a user Alt+Tabs), uses a combination of both names, though the combined name is rarely used, with people generally favoring one region's name over the other.<br /><br /><br />Zones<br />Green Grove Zone <br />Rusty Ruin Zone <br />Spring Stadium Zone <br />Diamond Dust Zone <br />Volcano Valley Zone <br />Gene Gadget Zone <br />Panic Puppet Zone <br />The Final Fight <br /><br />Criticisms<br />Upon its release, Sonic 3D Blast was largely a commercial failure and is considered by Sonic fans and Sega fans in general to have been partly responsible for the poor performance of the Saturn in Western markets compared to the PlayStation and Nintendo 64. For many fans today, it continues to serve as a grim reminder of Sonic's darkest era. <br />This game is often criticized for not being true to the core Sonic games, due to its lack of speed and rather clumsy controls (problems mostly caused by its isometric format). One high note is that the music (mostly the Saturn version) is considered to be some of the best Sonic music, and several tracks from the Genesis version were remixed in Sonic Adventure.<div class="blogger-post-footer"><img width='1' height='1' src='https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/tracker/11284572-112283764910566598?l=segaroms.blogspot.com'/></div>Murat Alperennoreply@blogger.com7tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-11284572.post-1122806200095501192005-07-31T03:35:00.000-07:002005-07-31T03:36:40.096-07:00Sonic the Hedgehog 3Sonic the Hedgehog 3, or simply Sonic 3, is a platform game in the Sonic the Hedgehog series. It was released as a sequel to Sonic the Hedgehog 2.<br /><br />The game was released for the Sega Genesis in the United States on February 2, 1994. The European Sega Mega Drive release came later that month. The game was released in Japan for the Mega Drive on May 27, 1994. It was re-released for the Sega Saturn in 1998 as part of Sonic Jam, the Nintendo GameCube in 2002 as part of the Sonic Mega Collection and Sony PlayStation 2 and Microsoft Xbox in 2004 as part of Sonic Mega Collection Plus.<br /><br /><br /><br />Plot<br />At the end of Sonic the Hedgehog 2, the evil Dr. Ivo "Eggman" Robotnik had his Death Egg downed from orbit by the heroes, Sonic the Hedgehog and his companion Miles "Tails" Prower. Having not been completely destroyed, after all, the Death Egg has crash-landed on Angel Island. This island has special properties - not least the ability to float - which it gets from the magical jewel called the Master Emerald. When Dr. Robotnik learns of the Master Emerald, an all powerful jewel upon which the Chaos Emeralds base their powers, he tries to steal it to repair his Death Egg.<br /><br />Of course, Sonic and Tails have to put a stop to this, collecting Chaos Emeralds as they go before Dr. Robotnik does. Unfortunately, Dr. Robotnik has tricked the guardian of the Master Emerald, an echidna named Knuckles, into thinking that Sonic and Tails are the thieves, so he tries his best to stop them.<br /><br /><br />Overview of play<br />As the player, you control either Sonic or Tails. Your aim is to guide them through six zones, collecting all the Chaos and Super Emeralds on the way via special 3D stages. The six zones are divided into two acts, and unlike previous Sonic games, each zone has a mini-boss at the end of the first act, and each Act 1 connects directly to Act 2, preserving shields the players may have. After a boss is defeated, a short cutscene is shown to segue into the next zone.<br /><br /><br />Zones<br />Angel Island Zone: A tranquil jungle island that is set ablaze by Dr. Robotnik after Sonic and Tails arrive. The mini-boss is one of the hovering flame drones that burned the jungle. Sonic and/or Tails faces off against Dr. Robotnik's own flame-wielding vehicle at a waterfall. <br />Hydrocity Zone: The inner workings of a complex hydroelectric dam. After tangling with a mini-boss that can spin Sonic and Tails in a whirlpool, Dr. Robotnik tries to stop them with his own whirlpool inducer as well as depth charges. <br />Marble Garden Zone: The marble ruins of an ancient civilization. The mini-boss uses a pair of drills to attack Sonic and Tails, both directly and by drilling into the rock above and raining debris on their heads (reminiscent of Dr. Robotnik's own vehicle in the Mystic Cave Zone of Sonic 2). Dr. Robotnik attempts to crush the pair under the collapsing ruins, and when Tails airlifts Sonic out of danger, charges at them directly with his drill. This is the only zone without any water to drown Sonic or Tails. <br />Carnival Night Zone: Tails drops Sonic into a playful carnival filled with ballons, pinball bumpers, and cannons to launch from, although unlike Casino Night Zone in Sonic 2 there are no slot machines. After Sonic and Tails survive the mini-boss on a slowly eroding platform, they face Dr. Robotnik, who this time drops a large sphere and uses it to create an electric storm that draws the pair towards its discharge. <br />Ice Cap Zone: Sonic and Tails chase after Dr. Robotnik, travelling through ice, snow, and sometimes bottomless pits. The level begins with Sonic going down a slope on a snowboard. The mini-boss attacks with an orbiting belt of ice chunks. Dr. Robonik uses a "freeze-thrower" (a flamethrower that freezes rather than burns the victim) to fight Sonic and Tails. This is the only zone that does not have an easily-comparible equivalent in Sonic 2 in terms of environment. <br />Launch Base Zone: Dr. Robotnik's site that houses the stricken Death Egg, with spinning elevators for facilitation of travel and alarms to keep out intruders. The mini-boss uses two flailing arms. Dr. Robotnik uses three different weapons to stop Sonic and Tails: first, a static projectile launcher at the foot of the Death Egg. When that fails, Robotnik flees to the Death Egg and Sonic chases after, leaving Tails behind. After boarding, Dr. Robotnik employs a rocket armed with lasers to fight Sonic, and then finally resorts to a large pair of arms to grab Sonic in a ball and slam him into the floor (as well as the rather impressive ability to damage even Super Sonic, though taking Super Sonic to the final battle is rare). <br /><br />Multiplayer<br />Sonic 3 retained head-to-head racing introduced in Sonic 2, although instead of using levels from the single player game, five entirely new tracks were created for competitions. Knuckles was added as a selectable character. Players could select to play a Grand Prix of all five tracks, a single track to race on, or race the clock in time trial mode.<br /><br />The five tracks are:<br /><br />Azure Lake <br />Balloon Park <br />Chrome Gadget <br />Desert Palace <br />Endless Mine <br />The first letters of the track's names make up the sequence A, B, C, D, E.<br /><br /><br />Technical specifications<br />Sonic 3 had the option, unseen at that point in the Sonic series, to record the game level where a player had been and resume it at a later date - which increased the replay value tremendously as several levels sport secret passages and, although not vital to the ending of the game, allowed the collection of 7 Chaos Emeralds at a later date.<br /><br />A closer inspection of the ROM by fans provides some details on the marketing scheme pulled by Sega with the release of Sonic & Knuckles. While Sega originally stated that the new "revolutionary" lock-on technology literally transformed the secondary game (i.e. Sonic 3 or Sonic 2), the analysis of the rom reveals that Sonic 3 was produced with full knowledge and possibly even having most of Sonic & Knuckles already completed to as far as Lava Reef Zone, as it provides a whole second version of the game, not an "add-on".<div class="blogger-post-footer"><img width='1' height='1' src='https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/tracker/11284572-112280620009550119?l=segaroms.blogspot.com'/></div>Murat Alperennoreply@blogger.com2tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-11284572.post-1122806112160108352005-07-31T03:34:00.000-07:002005-08-02T06:51:40.143-07:00Sonic The Hedgehog 2Sonic the Hedgehog 2, or simply Sonic 2, the sequel to Sonic the Hedgehog, is a platform game made by Sega for the Mega Drive/Genesis. It features Sonic the Hedgehog and was the first game in which Super Sonic appeared, as well as being Miles "Tails" Prower's 16-bit debut.<br /> <br /><br />Release details<br />The game was released in Japan for the Sega Mega Drive on November 21, 1992. The Sega Genesis release in the United States came three days later, on November 24. The European Mega Drive release came later in November. It was re-released in the Sonic Jam collection on the Sega Saturn in 1997, for the Nintendo GameCube in 2002 as part of Sonic Mega Collection, and on the PlayStation 2 and Xbox in 2004 as part of Sonic Mega Collection Plus.<br /><br /><br />Storyline<br />The story, as told in the instruction booklet, is that Dr. Robotnik (Dr. Eggman in the Japanese version), has again captured all of the animals of the world and it is up to Sonic to free them. He is also planning to use the Chaos Emeralds as a power source for his Death Egg spacecraft.<br /><br /><br />Gameplay<br />The gameplay is similar to that of Sonic's first adventure. The player collects rings throughout the level. Getting hit when one has rings causes all of the rings to fly out of the character. Getting hit when one has no rings results in death. There are two basic moves: the jump and the spin-dash. In the spin-dash, the character curls up into a ball, prepares to dash, and speeds forward, remaining curled up. Breaking a monitor performs the action shown on it. There are various types of monitors, with contents such as 10 rings, invincibility, a shield, a speed boost, and speed-up shoes.<br /><br />Sonic can collect "Chaos Emeralds" by entering into special stages in which he must collect a set amount of the golden rings before the reaching the end of a lap. Once the player has collected seven Chaos Emeralds, Sonic can transform into "Super Sonic" by collecting 50 rings in the real world and jumping. Super Sonic is a temporary invulnerability mode introduced in Sonic 2 in which Sonic appears golden, runs faster, and jumps higher. As time passes, the number of rings Sonic has decreases by one ring per second unless new rings are collected. When the ring count reaches zero or Super Sonic dies, Sonic will revert to regular Sonic.<br /><br />The game can be played as Sonic, Tails, or both. When playing as Sonic and Tails, the screen focuses on Sonic. If Tails remains outside of the screen for an extended period of time, he flies back to meet Sonic. Tails can be played by a human player or can be computer-controlled.<br /><br />Sonic 2 features a two-player split-screen competition mode. In a two-player game, the players compete on a game level for better performance in five categories: total rings collected, rings at the end of the level, time for level completion, score, and boxes opened. The person who wins more categories wins a level. After one player finishes a level, the remaining player has 60 seconds to finish the level.<br /><br /><br />Production<br />Sonic 2 differed from the original Sonic the Hedgehog in that it was produced at the Sega Technical Institute in the United States, and experienced Japanese Sega members such as Yuji Naka and Hirokazu Yasuhara (the first game's lead programmer and game planner respectively) were brought in to work alongside the American developers. Two artists in particular stand out: Brenda Ross and Craig Stitt. Peter Morawiec and Tim Skelly also worked on some art for the Special Stages.<br /><br /><br />List of zones<br />Below is a list of zones in Sonic the Hedgehog 2, in order of appearance in the game. Each describes the boss section of the zone, in which Robotnik attempts to defeat Sonic.<br /><br /><br />Emerald Hill Zone<br />A green island with big fields and beaches and other tropical islands in the distance. The boss in this zone has Dr. Robotnik in a drill-equipped dune buggy. After seven hits, Robotinik shoots the drill bit at Sonic; one more hit destroys his machine.<br /><br /><br />Chemical Plant Zone<br />Dr. Robotnik's chemical plant, full of tubes and floating platforms. He uses a new substance called "Mega-mack" to try to kill Sonic by vacuuming up this substance and dropping it on Sonic. As long as Sonic is ducking he cannot be hurt by this. This level is also notable for a brief rising-water section, which provides a rather steep learning curve for new players.<br /><br /><br />Aquatic Ruin Zone<br />An ancient ruin located in a forest valley partially submerged in water. Dr. Robotnik tries to use the ruin's technology against Sonic between pillars that spit out arrows.<br /><br /><br />Casino Night Zone<br />A city that never sleeps, full of pinball rooms, flashing lights, and slot machines. Dr. Robotnik tries to kill Sonic with his neon spike-ball machine.<br /><br />The slot machines give out different prizes depending on when the reels land:<br /><br />3 Rings: 10 rings <br />3 Bars: 20 rings <br />3 Tails: 25 rings <br />3 Sonics: 30 rings <br />3 Jackpots: 150 rings <br />3 Dr. Robotniks: lose 100 rings (be careful!) <br />In addition, a Jackpot or two can also act as a wild card or wild cards, rewarding rings even though the other reel(s) are not Jackpots. Sometimes they merely fill in for the missing icon, other times they act as doublers:<br /><br />2 Tails, 1 Jackpot: 50 rings <br />2 Sonics, 1 Jackpot: 60 rings <br />2 Jackpots, 1 Tails: 100 rings <br />2 Jackpots, 1 Sonic: 120 rings <br />Jackpots and Dr. Robotniks: lose all rings (be very careful!) <br />A Bar will also give out rings depending on how many there are:<br /><br />1 Bar: 2 rings <br />2 Bars: 4 rings <br />3 Bars: 20 rings (see above) <br />Note: In this case, Jackpots only act as doublers in the case of only Jackpots and Bars, i.e., two Bars with one Jackpot is worth 40 rings, and one Bar with two Jackpots is worth 80 rings, but one Bar and one Jackpot is only worth 2 rings.<br /><br /><br />Hill Top Zone<br />A zone on a mountain high above the clouds. The mountain is also an active volcano. Dr. Robotnik uses the volcano's lava to shoot fireballs and set the grass alight in his Lava Submarine. Depending on one's route through the level, Sonic may face an earth- or lava-quake in the Second Act.<br /><br /><br />Mystic Cave Zone<br />An old, dark abandoned mine inhabited by Badniks that attempt to shock or collide into Sonic. Dr. Robotnik tries to stab Sonic with sharp debris as he uses his machines to drill into the ceiling of the mine.<br /><br /><br />Oil Ocean Zone<br />A zone polluted by Dr. Robotnik's oil-drilling projects. The viscosity of the oil allows Sonic to run across it, although he can still die in the oil if he is totally submerged in it. The Badnik "Aquis" is found in this zone. It is a fast moving and dangerous mechanical seahorse, and is able to float around in the air, never touching the ground. Dr. Robotnik tries to kill Sonic in his submarine again but uses spikes and lasers this time.<br /><br /><br />Metropolis Zone<br />An extra-long level, in which Dr. Robotnik resides. There are lots of machines, including the Pipe Teleporter and screw elevators, as well as Badnik stars which explode to puncture Sonic. Dr. Robotnik protects himself against Sonic with spiraling eggs each containing a fake Robotnik.<br /><br />Metropolis Zone had 3 acts, like Sonic 1. However, all the other zones in Sonic 2 had two or one. This was because Tom Payne (the artist in charge of this level) had also been assigned another level that was finally scrapped due to lack of time, leaving him to work on this third act.<br /><br /><br />Sky Chase Zone<br />In order to chase Dr. Robotnik, Tails uses his Tornado plane to fly into the sky to battle Concorde birds and turtle battleships. This is a very short level with one act and no bosses.<br /><br /><br />Wing Fortress Zone<br />After Tails's plane is shot down, Sonic jumps onto Dr. Robotnik's sky ship, where he has to avoid falling to his doom and reach the bridge to Dr. Robotnik. Sonic is ambushed and has to dodge a massive laser while the walls narrow. The laser ends up blowing the circuits and Dr. Robotnik tries to escape in his spaceship. Tails comes back with the plane and flies Sonic close to the ship using a rocket booster installed at the bottom of the plane. Sonic grabs on to Dr. Robotnik's ship and gets to the Death Egg.<br /><br /><br />Death Egg Zone<br />Sonic must battle against a silver Sonic robot with no rings to help him. After defeating the robot, Sonic chases Robotnik into a giant armoured battle suit, the last boss that Sonic has to destroy. After defeating him, he runs out of the exploding Death Egg and skydives back down, and is caught by Tails's plane (unless one has managed to collect all the Chaos Emeralds; in that case Super Sonic flies alongside the plane).<br /><br /><br />Secrets<br />Knuckles the Echidna in Sonic the Hedgehog 2 is a game activated by locking Sonic the Hedgehog 2 to the passthru cartridge of Sonic & Knuckles that was released later by Sega. The resulting game is almost identical to Sonic the Hedgehog 2, except that one plays as Knuckles the Echidna. Although some fans believe that Sonic 2 was created with foreknowledge that such an add-on device would be made later, this is incorrect. The majority of the changes to Sonic 2 are actually contained in the Sonic & Knuckles cartridge and loaded at boot if a Sonic 2 cartridge is found in the pass-through slot; the actual Sonic 2 data is accessed very rarely.<br /><br />Time restrictions necessitated dropping some features and levels from the final game. Remnants of these like incomplete levels and unused sounds and graphics have been revealed through study of the internals of the game using emulators along with a debug mode.<br /><br />The game's level select code, activated by playing music within the game, is 19, 65, 09, 17; Sonic programmer Yuji Naka's birthday is September 17, 1965. Its debug code is 1, 9, 9, 2, 1, 1, 2, 4; Sonic 2's U.S. release date was November 24, 1992.<br /><br /><br />Beta version<br />On the Internet, a widely distributed prototype of the game, better known as Sonic the Hedgehog 2 beta, has been discovered by Simon Wai, which features several incomplete zones. Only four levels can be played in "normal" gameplay; the rest have to be accessed through the level select code. Many are not playable, so the debug code is used to explore the acts. Some of the acts are empty, causing Sonic and Tails to fall to their doom immediately after beginning the level. The beta is frequently examined by hackers to determine how Sonic the Hedgehog 2 was developed.<br /><br />In Asia and Brazil, the beta version was put on cartridges and passed off as the final version by pirates who are believed to have altered it slightly to stop the Sega logo from showing when the game boots up, as was common practice.<br /><br />A mock-up picture exists which suggests that at one stage in development, a desert-like zone was planned in a Sonic 2 prototype, which until recently was believed to be named Dust Hill Zone. However, there is nothing to suggest that the level has ever existed in a playable format. The only official name that is known for this zone is "Sabaku", or "Desert", zone.<br /><br />In addition to the renamed zones, such as Green Hill Zone which became the Emerald Hill Zone, Dust Hill Zone which became the Mystic Cave Zone, Neo Green Hill Zone which became Aquatic Ruin Zone, and Sky Fortress Zone which became Wing Fortress Zone, the following levels exist in the beta version of the game.<br /><br /><br />Wood Zone<br />A dense forest zone with only the very beginning of Act 1 programmed, and that itself is very glitchy. The music is the same as that in the Metropolis Zone. There are no enemies present in the Wood Zone. Without the debug mode activated, this level is cut very short due to the fact that it is impossible get past the first ramp, the characters hit the floor above instead. However, using debug, it can be further explored. The stage suddenly ends halfway through an animated (though not active) conveyor belt. Act 2 has no data.<br /><br /><br />Genocide City Zone<br />This level's data has either been removed, or not yet coded, and the player falls and dies immediately upon entering the level. The music used is that of Chemical Plant Zone.<br /><br /><br />Hidden Palace Zone<br />The Hidden Palace Zone appears to be an underwater cavern with large crystals in it. The music used is that of the 2-player mode of Mystic Cave Zone. It contains badniks never seen in the released version, such as a red dinosaur badnik. The large emerald found in this stage has at times been suggested to be the Master Emerald, however those who worked on the zone have said it was just another block to break through. At one point in the zone is a long shaft which appears as if it was intended to loop from the top to the bottom of the map, but even if one navigates to the other end, there is not much left to the stage besides an animated (but as in the Wood Zone conveyor belts, not working) water slide. Act 2 is identical to Act 1, except the player is stuck inside a wall at the start, and all objects and enemies are gone.<br /><br />Some suggest that music 10 in the final Sound Test, which was unused, was intended for this level. In addition, while the art was removed from the final game, the collision data remains, and the level itself can be accessed by entering the Game Genie code ACLA-ATD4 and using the Level Select to go to Death Egg Zone. This has led some researchers to believe that Hidden Palace Zone was intended to be in the final game as a "hidden" level that could be accessed only through a cheat code.<br /><br /><br />Death Egg Zone<br />According to the level select, this zone originally had 2 acts (unlike in the final version). But like Genocide City, neither act has any data and the player merely falls and dies immediately. No music is played in this zone.<div class="blogger-post-footer"><img width='1' height='1' src='https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/tracker/11284572-112280611216010835?l=segaroms.blogspot.com'/></div>Murat Alperennoreply@blogger.com34tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-11284572.post-1122806022703891912005-07-31T03:33:00.000-07:002005-07-31T03:33:42.710-07:00Shining ForceShining Force: The Legacy of Great Intention, more commonly referred to as Shining Force, is a 1992 turn-based strategy role playing video game for the Sega Genesis console. While primarily a traditional fantasy-themed game, it contains some steampunk elements.<br /><br />(If you are looking for information on the Shining series in general, please see Shining Force Series)<br /><br />Game Info<br />While the game is the first in the Shining Force series, it is technically the second game released in the greater Shining series, which began with Shining in the Darkness. The transition from Shining in the Darkness to Shining Force was a major change, with few elements between the two games being shared, save for the names of certain items and spells. The villain of the first game, Darksol, reappeared throughout many of the following games in the series. Another significant change was in gameplay. Shining in the Darkness was a dungeon crawler in first-person perspective, while Shining Force was a third-person strategy/RPG game.<br /><br />The game was first released in 1992 in Japan, and 1993 in North America and Europe. It's been re-released in 1999 for "Sega Archives form USA" (Japanese), in 2000 for Sega Smash Pack 2 and Sega's Greatest Hits 2, both for PC, in 2001 for "Sega Smash Pack for Dreamcast", and again in 2002 for "Sega Smash Pack Twin Pack" for the PC.<br /><br />The game was remade in 2004 for the Game Boy Advance under the title Shining Force: Resurrection of the Dark Dragon. The changes included three new characters and the addition of "cards" allowing a certain character to use these special bonuses and abilities in battle.<br /><br /><br />Plot<br />As the game opens, the following is shown on screen:<br /><br />In ages long forgotten... Light fought Darkness for control of the world.<br />Dark Dragon led the evil hordes of darkness.<br />The Ancients fought back with the Powers of Light.<br />Dark Dragon was defeated and cast into another dimension.<br />The Lord of Darkness vowed to return in 1,000 years.<br />Time passed, and Dark Dragon was forgotten by all.<br />Ten centuries of peace ruled the land of Rune.<br />Until the kingdom of Runefaust brought war to Rune.<br />Hordes of evil creatures ravaged the land.<br />Here and there, strongholds of Good still held out...<br />awaiting a Hero who could wield the Powers of Light!<br /><br /><br />Chapter 1<br />The game opens in the Kingdom of Guardiana, in the land of Rune. You play as a Swordsman whose name you choose (default is Max, that is what will be used through the rest of this article.) Max is a disciple of the famed knight Varios, who is called upon when a force from Runefaust is seen at the Gate of the Ancients. Varios chooses to send Max to investigate, so as not to scare the townsfolk with a large force. At this point you are joined by 5 other characters, and given 100 gold.<br /><br />After 2 battles, you've returned to Guardiana to discover that while you were busy, Runefaust has attacked Guardiana. You arrive just in time to see Kane, one of the generals (and a boss you fight later) kill Lord Varios. The King of Guardiana tells you to stop Runefaust, and find his daughter Anri, who is away at a school for magi, and then immediately dies.<br /><br />You travel to Alterone, and soon find out that Kane is pulling the King of Alterone's strings. After breaking out of the prison, you defeat the invading force, and the king apologises to you and tells you of a secret passage. You go through the passage and Chapter 1 ends.<br /><br /><br />Chapter 2<br />You've made your way to the town of Rindo, and you need a boat to follow Kane any further, but the mayor of town only has one boat left which he refuses to part with. You go to Manarina, and find Princess Anri, who joins the force, and meet Otrant (who is an adviser now and then again in Chapter 7) who sends you to retrieve the Orb of Truth, which allows you to meet the Spirit of the Holy Spring.<br /><br />You learn from the spirit that Runefaust is trying to free Dark Dragon (mentioned in the opening credits) and are sent to go stop them by retrieving the manual of the seal (a book which has the incantation to free Dark Dragon.)<br /><br />You then return to Rindo, to discover that while you were gone, the mayor's grandson has gone missing. The mayor promises that if you find him, he will give you his last boat. You meet Mishaela, another one of the game's bosses, who turns you over to one of her subordinates. This battle can be argued to be the first boss fight. When you win, the mayor's grandson comes out from behind some crates, and heads home. The mayor does as he promised and turns over his boat, however as soon as you board it, Mishaela appears and sets fire to it.<br /><br />Since there are no more boats in Rindo, you head north to Shade Abbey, where another of the game's bosse, Darksol, is reanimating the dead, and has turned a birdman to stone. After defeating the zombies, the birdman and his wife offer to guide you to the town of Uranbatol to find another boat, and Chapter 2 ends.<br /><br /><br />Chapter 3<br />You begin Chapter 3 in the town of Bustoke, where Runefaust has forced all the men to work in the quarry looking for a weapon called "the laser eye". You also find out about the insane Zylo, who you are given a side quest to cure. After rescuing the men and curing Zylo, you continue on to Pao bridge and fight a battle against the laser eye (and others). Winning this battle ends the chapter.<br /><br /><br />Chapter 4<br />You're now in the travelling town of Pao, where you talk to a general of the Runefaust army, Elliot, who doesn't like the current state of affairs, but is loyal to his king. In the next battle, when you defeat him, he begs you to free Runefaust from Darksol's clutches.<br /><br />The town of Pao has traveled and come back to where you are, so you re-enter it and rest and re-arm before heading to Uranbatol.<br /><br />You will fight two battles in Uranbatol, the second a boss fight against Balbazak, who turns the ship over to you just before Darksol appears and kills him for his cowardice. Darksol laughs and says you wont live through the trip, but you still head out undeterred, and the chapter ends.<br /><br /><br />Chapter 5<br />As expected, you are attacked while en route, and the ship is damaged. You meet a mermaid from the land of Waral, and follow her back to get the ship repaired. While wandering around town, (in part on a small boat) you get knocked out after an acident, and wake up on one of the smaller islands.<br /><br />You pass through a strange passage, to wind up foiling the plans of a Runefaust force trying to use the Shining Path (a mystical shortcut between lands). However, when you defeat them, the leader of that force seals the Path so you can't use it either, and are forced to take the long way of physically travelling.<br /><br />You return to the main island, and the King says that the repairs are free, as a token of gratitude. You leave the island and are attacked and damaged again. The boat drifts off course as the chaper ends.<br /><br /><br />Chapter 6<br />You wake up in Rindo, where children run the town, and find out more about the manual of the seal, and then make your way to Dragonia, where the manual is guarded by the last of the sacred dragons. After the dragon joins you, you finally fight Kane, to discover that he was a hero who was being controlled by Darksol by means of a magic mask.<br /><br />When the mask breaks, Kane is wracked with guilt, and tries to help you. The two of you find the manual, but arrive just in time to see Darksol take it. Kane pushes you out of the room, and fights Darksol alone. They both diappear for the time being.<br /><br />You return to Rindo, and they suggest you should go to skull castle. You fight your way to the castle, and then fight Mishaela inside. You take the Sword of Light from her, and the chapter ends.<br /><br /><br />Chapter 7<br />You've arrived in the town of Prompt, where you are almost immediately imprisoned by a paranoid king. For some reason he decides you're trustworthy once you break out of prison, and he tells you that his forces that he sent to fight Darksol are failing. Kane is recovering from his battle with Darksol in the castle, and he regains consciousness just long enough to convince the King to let you go fight.<br /><br />You fight your way into the tower of the ancients, and are again just in time to discover Darksol, this time retrieving the key to the seal. Kane appears, and Darksol kills him easily, but lets you live as he's on a tight schedrule.<br /><br />You return to Prompt, and Otrant re-appears to tell you about the Chaos Breaker, a sword which might be able to re-seal Dark Dragon, which is made from the Sword of Light which you have, and the Sword of Darkness which Kane left in the care of the King of Prompt. You use the Shining Path and travel to Metapha, where you fight against the robot boss Chaos.<br /><br />The spirit of the spring puts in another appearance and teaches you how to make the Chaos Breaker and tells you that she has used all her power to help you, and can't do any more. You return to Prompt and then travel to the gates of Runefaust.<br /><br /><br />Chapter 8<br />Having defeated the army guarding Runefaust, you make your way to King Ramladu's castle, where you fight two battles, the second a boss-fight against the King himself. As he dies, he tells you that Darksol was controlling his mind, and tells you to hurry, as Darksol is about to perform the rites to release Dark Dragon.<br /><br />You raise the castle of the ancients from the ocean, and travel to it through Runefaust's gate of the ancients (which is the pair to the one where you fought your first battle) and are immediately are challenged by Colossus, a three headed creature. After beating him, you enter the final battle against Darksol.<br /><br />As soon as you defeat Darksol, he completes the rites and Dark Dragon is freed. Darksol gives the last shreds of his power to Dark Dragon and dies. You immediately have to fight the three headed Dark Dragon (without being given a chance to revive dead players, but you do get a full heal.)<br /><br /><br />Epilogue<br />When you defeat Dark Dragon, he doesn't die, until you stab him in the heart, which reseals him in another dimension. You cast your Egress spell, which normally transports everyone to safety, but this time saves everyone but you. The other characters watch as the castle of the ancients sinks back into the water, and Max is officially Missing In Action, presumed dead. After the credits, theres a small scene where Max is shown talking to a farmer in a far away land, who invites him to come live in their village. Max agrees, and the game ends.<div class="blogger-post-footer"><img width='1' height='1' src='https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/tracker/11284572-112280602270389191?l=segaroms.blogspot.com'/></div>Murat Alperennoreply@blogger.com3tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-11284572.post-1122805935332827332005-07-31T03:30:00.000-07:002005-07-31T03:32:15.333-07:00Sensible SoccerSensible Soccer, often referred by fans as Sensi is a football video game series that was highly popular in the early 90's and still has a cult following, despite the last title being released in 1999. Developed by Sensible Software and first released for Amiga and Atari ST computers in 1992, it featured a bird's-eye view (most games until then such as Kick Off and Matchday used top down or side view), editable teams and (some claim) gameplay still unsurpassed today.<br /><br /><br />Games in the series<br />Sensible Soccer <br />Released in 1992 <br />Platforms: Amiga, DOS, SNES, Game Boy, Sega Mega Drive, Sega Mega CD, Sega Game Gear, Atari ST and Atari Jaguar <br />The "standard name" for games in the series. Console versions are based on SS 92/93, but simply named "Sensible Soccer". <br /> <br />Mega Drive screenshotSensible Soccer 92/93 <br />Released in 1992 <br />Platforms: Amiga, Atari ST <br />Slightly improved version of Sensible Soccer <br />Sensible World Of Soccer <br />Released in 1994 <br />Platforms: Amiga, DOS <br />Includes several leagues and career mode. An updated version (SWOS: European Champion Edition) was released weeks before <br />Features a title song "Goal Scoring Superstar Hero" composed by Richard Joseph and Jon Hare. <br />Sensible World Of Soccer 96-97 <br />Released in 1996 <br />Platforms: Amiga, DOS <br />Improved version of SWOS. <br />Sensible Soccer 98 <br />Released in 1997 <br />Platforms: DOS, Windows <br />3D version that dropped the pin-sized players. <br />Sensible Soccer 2000 <br />Released in 1999 <br />Platforms: Sony PlayStation, Windows <br />Final new release in the series <br />Sensible Soccer Mobile <br />Released in 2005 <br />Platforms: Java <br />Developed by Kuju Wireless 1 <br />[edit]<br />Trivia<br />Sensible Soccer spawned several clones, amongst them Croteam's Football Glory, for which they were sued by Sensible Software. <br />There are still many shareware/freeware projects which are inspired by Sensible, such as Yoda Soccer or Andreas Osswald's Championship Soccer. <br />The graphic style of the game was used in other Sensible Software games, such as Cannon Fodder and Sensible Golf. <br />SWOS 1996 received a score of 96% from Amiga Power, the highest mark given for any game in their 65-issue run. <br />A group of fans in Serbia named "SWOS Witnesses" ("SWOSovi Svedoci" in Serbian) organized four World Swos Tournaments from 2001 to 2004. WSTs were held in Backa Palanka (2001 and 2004), Belgrade (2002) and Nova Pazova (2003). Most players were from Serbia, but there also were contestants from Czech Republic, Austria, Poland, Bulgaria and Lebanon. <br />Regular tournaments are also still held in Czech Republic, Germany and Brazil.<div class="blogger-post-footer"><img width='1' height='1' src='https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/tracker/11284572-112280593533282733?l=segaroms.blogspot.com'/></div>Murat Alperennoreply@blogger.com10tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-11284572.post-1122805764638675422005-07-31T03:28:00.000-07:002005-07-31T03:29:24.640-07:00Mighty MaxMighty Max was an animated action/sci-fi/horror series which aired from 1993 to 1994 to promote the British Mighty Max toys, an offshoot of the Polly Pocket line. It ran for two seasons; with a total of 40 episodes airing during the show's run. It starred the voice talents of Rob Paulsen as Max, Richard Moll as Norman, Tony Jay as Virgil, and Tim Curry as Skullmaster.<br /><br />The storyline follows Max, a young boy who receives a red baseball cap with a yellow M embroidered on the face. He is told by Virgil, a Lemurian who's been turned into a talking, humanoid chicken (okay, fowl, actually!), that the cap grants Max the power to travel instantly through space. Max, Virgil, and Norman, a sword-wielding Viking, travel together around the world, defending the Earth against the minions of the evil Skullmaster (responsible for the downfall of both the Lemurians and the people of Atlantis), as well as fighting a variety of supernatural monsters on the side. The show's violence and descriptions of violent acts were considered graphic by some viewers, especially when its target audience was children.<br /><br />The finale episode featured Max, Norman, and Virgil in a battle against Skullmaster and their previously defeated foes with both Norman and Virgil getting killed leaving Max as the only one to defeat Skullmaster who is about to gain ultimate power. Some fans have criticized the final episode's conclusion for "looping" the end of the series into the beginning. Regardless, fans of the show to this day are vocal in their requests for the entire series to be released on DVD.<br /><br />A patent was taken by Film Roman for a Mighty Max animated film in 1995, but such a film was never created. The reasons for this are unclear, but the television show had retained low popularity and the toys were also losing ground. However the show generated other merchandise such as a comic book, board game, and several video games.<br /><br />The merchandising was far more popular than the show itself. Mighty Max toys were sold as playsets of varying sizes with very small (usually non-articulated) figurines inside. Each playset contained a Mighty Max figure as well as one or more villains and sometimes Virgil, Norman or both. Any Mighty Max collector would quickly accumulate hundreds of different copies of Max in various poses.<br /><br />There were a small series of larger more expensive playsets with various mechanical and electronic features such as opening jaws (on an island playset shaped as a dragon's head) and lights. In 1995, due to the popularity of the playsets at the time, the McDonald's Happy Meal offered a toy playset featuring Mighty Max. Also, Mighty Max was turned into a video game for the SNES and Sega Genesis and a handheld game for Tiger Electronics and Systema.<div class="blogger-post-footer"><img width='1' height='1' src='https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/tracker/11284572-112280576463867542?l=segaroms.blogspot.com'/></div>Murat Alperennoreply@blogger.com4tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-11284572.post-1122805711485490342005-07-31T03:26:00.000-07:002005-07-31T03:28:31.490-07:00Road RashRoad Rash is the name of a motorcycle-racing/combat video game series by Electronic Arts, originally for the Sega MegaDrive/Genesis, in which the player participates in illegal street races, and later ported for several other systems. Six games/versions were released, the first in 1991 and the last in 1999, although a 2004 licensed port for the Game Boy Advance exists.<br /><br />Presented in a third-person view similar to Hang-On (although bike and rider are proportionately smaller), the player competes in road races, and must finish in the top 3 places on every race to proceed to the next level, where the opponents ride faster and harder and the tracks are longer and more dangerous. Placing in each race gives a certain amount of money which increases considerably in each level which allows the player to buy faster bikes which is needed to stay competitive. The game is over if the player is arrested (a policeman knocks the player off their bike or the player is caught stopped or on foot near a police bike) and the player can't pay the fine, or if the bike suffers more damage than it can take and is wrecked.<br /><br />Aside from the high speed, big-air and spectacular crashes, what separated Road Rash from other racing games was its combat element. The player could fight other bikers with a variety of handweapons. The player would initially start off with just a punch and kick, but if the gamer timed a punch right, they could grab a weapon from another rider. The weapons themselves ranged from clubs, crowbars, nunchakus, cattle prods and even police batons. Fights between riders to knock each other off the bike would often go on at high speeds through traffic, pedestrians and roadside obstacles, with the victor gaining place and the loser gaining bike damage and losing time.<br /><br />The motorcycle police officers were never friendly and they have dual antagonistic roles. They fight the player as another, usually tougher, opponent and they also serve as gameplay enforcers by policing the back of the pack and culling players who fall too far behind or choose to explore the world rather than race in it. The stakes are higher for losing a fight with a police officer: the player would be busted and fined and the race would end. If there were insufficient funds to pay, the game would be over.<br /><br />Even though knocking other racers and police officers from their bikes is a permissible means towards achieving victory in the game, and it initiated the genre of motorcycle-racing/combat games, Road Rash got little to no attention in the video game controversy of the '90s. Some of this may be attributed to the designers skewed, yet balanced rules of political correctness: Violence and rewards are divided up equally between ethnicity and sex and stereotypes are balanced by representing a cross-section of characters all behaving badly. The game consistently garnered a Teen rating from the ESRB with a modifier of animated violence.<br /><br />The 32-bit versions of the game featured cutscenes professionally filmed in San Francisco and Los Altos Hills that were notable for a wry sense of humor. For example, if the player was arrested, then the game would show a brief movie clip of a motorcyclist being handcuffed to a police officer's motorcycle (which would then start moving), or a clip of the arrestee being placed in the trunk of a police cruiser. The actors were were both professional stuntmen and the games designers and featured the company bike- a red Ducati which is still on display at EA headquarters. The 16-bit versions featured animations as cut scenes. The possible game triggers for cut scenes in all the versions are: race win, level progression, game win, wreck and busted.<br /><br />The game's title is based on the slang term for the severe friction burns that can occur in a motorcycling fall where skin comes into contact with the ground at high speed.<br /><br /><br />Sound<br />The original Genesis version featured a Rob Hubbard soundtrack, however later versions released on CD formats featured music tracks from bands such as Soundgarden, Swervedriver, and Therapy?. Months before Road Rash was even released for the 3DO it received 3DO's 1994 "Soundtrack of the Year" award. The last version featured garage and unsigned bands who got a chance to be in the game by sending in their tapes.<br /><br /><br />Releases<br />When Road Rash debuted on the 32-bit home game consoles they were initially ported from the 3DO version of the game. All of these games were called Road Rash despite being 4th in the series. Derivative works were reengineered up for Microsoft Windows and Nintendo 64 platforms or reengineered down to Sega Mega-CD and the handheld consoles. In 2000 due to a restructuring at EA the key design, technical and artistic forces behind the Road Rash series left EA. At the time of its demise, Road Rash was EAs 2nd most profitable series in which it didn't have to pay royalty or licensing fees. EA attempted to resurrect the series with a PlayStation 2 version but was unable to complete it.<br /><br />Version History<br /><br />V.1 - Road Rash 16-bit <br />All Races took place in California locales on progressively longer 2 lane roads. <br />V.2 - Road Rash II 16-bit <br />All Races took place in North America, 2 lane roads. <br />V.3 - Road Rash III 16-bit <br />All Races took place in 5 of 7 countries (Brazil, Germany, Kenya, UK, Italy, Japan and Australia) on 2 lane roads. 15 bikes, bike upgrades, night racing (in Japan), 7 Weapons including mace, taser. <br />V.4 - Road Rash 32-bit <br />All Races took place in California locales(The City, The peninsula, Pacific Coast Highway, Sierra Nevada, and Napa Valley) on multilane roads with brief divided road sections. <br />V.5 - Road Rash 3D 32-bit <br />All Races took place on routes laid out through a single interconnected road system- hence the title 3D. <br />V.6 - Road Rash: Jail Break 32-bit <br />An interconnected road system and 2 player cooperative play- with a sidecar. <br />Titles and release dates<br /><br />Road Rash <br />V.1 <br />Sega Genesis,1991 original <br />Atari ST, 1992 {Peakstar Software) <br />Amiga, 1992 {Peakstar Software) <br />Sega Master System, 1994 (ported by Probe, published by US Gold) <br />V.2 <br />Game Boy, 1994 <br />Game Gear, 1994 <br />Internet- AOL Games Channel, 2001 <br />V.4 <br />3DO, original 1994 <br />Sega Mega-CD, 1994 <br />PlayStation, 1996 <br />Sega Saturn, 1996 <br />Microsoft Windows PC, 1996 (Papyrus Design Group) <br />Game Boy Color, 2000 (3d6 Games) <br />Road Rash II <br />V.2 <br />Sega Genesis, 1992 original <br />Nintendo, never released <br />Road Rash 3: Tour De Force <br />V.3 <br />Sega Genesis, 1995 original <br />Road Rash 3D <br />V.5 <br />PlayStation, 1998 original <br />Road Rash 64 <br />V.5 <br />Nintendo 64, 1999 (THQ) <br />Road Rash: Jailbreak <br />V.6 <br />PlayStation, 1999 original <br />Game Boy Advance, 2004 (Destination Software, Inc)<div class="blogger-post-footer"><img width='1' height='1' src='https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/tracker/11284572-112280571148549034?l=segaroms.blogspot.com'/></div>Murat Alperennoreply@blogger.com7tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-11284572.post-1122805563191125482005-07-31T03:25:00.000-07:002005-07-31T03:26:03.193-07:00Premier ManagerPremier Manager is the name of a football management video game series started in 1992. Published by Gremlin Interactive, it was first developed by Realms of Fantasy, later passed to Spanish company Dinamic Software. The later games are published and developed by Zoo Digital, who bought the rights from Infogrames and hired some members of the original Gremlin staff.<br /><br />Until the Championship Manager series matured with the second version, the brand Premier Manager was the leading name on the popular managing video game market.<br /><br />It should not be confused with EA's Premier League Manager short-run series.<br /><br /><br />Games in the series<br />Premier Manager <br />Developed by Realms of Fantasy <br />Released in 1992 <br />Platforms: Amiga, DOS, Atari ST, Sega Mega Drive (in 1996) <br />manage, train, hire, build facilities and scout opponents of an lowly English team. <br />Premier Manager 2 - The New Season <br />Developed by Realms of Fantasy <br />Released in 1993 <br />Platforms: Amiga, DOS <br />minor improvments over PM, plus european competitions <br />Premier Manager 3 <br />Developed by Realms of Fantasy <br />Released in 1994 <br />Platforms: Amiga, DOS <br />Refined version of Premier Manager 2. <br />Premier Manager 97 <br />Developed by Dinamic Software <br />Released in 1996 <br />Platforms: Windows <br />A Sega Mega Drive version based on Premier Manager 2 with the same name was released. <br />Gremlin passed the developing to Dinamic Software, who made the popular PC Fútbol series. Unsurprisingly, the game was PC Premier 5 without arcade mode. For the first time, gave the player the option to coach a Premiership team from the start. <br />Premier Manager 98 <br />Developed by Dinamic Software <br />Released in 1997 <br />Platforms: Windows, PlayStation <br />Simple update of Premier Manager 97. Bugs ironed, squads updated, and nothing more. It turned to be the last game to achieve moderate success and positive reviews in the series. <br />Premier Manager Ninety-Nine <br />Developed by Dinamic Software <br />Released in 1998 <br />Platforms: Windows, PlayStation <br />Slightly improved version of the two previous games, based on PC Fútbol 6. The final game in the series released by Gremlin. <br />Premier Manager 2000 <br />Released in 1999 <br />Platforms: PlayStation <br />Premier Manager 2002-2003 <br />Developed by Zoo Digital <br />Released in 2002 <br />Platforms: Windows <br />Premier Manager 2003-2004 <br />Developed by Zoo Digital <br />Released in 2003 <br />Platforms: Windows, PlayStation 2, Game Boy Advance <br />Premier Manager 2004-2005 <br />Developed by Zoo Digital <br />Released in 2004 <br />Platforms: Windows, PlayStation 2, Game Boy Advance <br />Premier Manager 2005/2006 <br />Developed by Zoo Digital <br />Released in 2005 <br />Platforms: Windows, PlayStation 2, Game Boy Advance<div class="blogger-post-footer"><img width='1' height='1' src='https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/tracker/11284572-112280556319112548?l=segaroms.blogspot.com'/></div>Murat Alperennoreply@blogger.com11tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-11284572.post-1122805499823717952005-07-31T03:24:00.000-07:002005-07-31T03:24:59.826-07:00Pete Sampras TennisPete Sampras Tennis was the first game of three of this celebrity endorsed tennis video game series, released by British software house Codemasters. It was followed by Pete Sampras Tennis '96 still in Sega's 16-bit console and later by Pete Sampras Tennis '97, released for the PlayStation and Windows/DOS.<br /><br />Gameplay<br /> <br />Singles on lawnWhile Pete Sampras Tennis uses all three control pad buttons, the game play remains simple yet realistic, for its time. While serving, the A button sends the ball automatically, and B allows the player to control the ball speed and direction, and is the only way to score aces against the best players. During play, A lobs, B sends a normal shot and C, if pressed alone performs a top spin shot, if in conjunction with left or right on the D-Pad the player dives in that direction. It is also possible to aim the ball by pressing any direction on the D-Pad before there is contact between the racket and the ball.<br />Expert players are able to win against any computer player without giving a point away, since the AI isn't very well developed (and there are no difficulty options) and its hard to miss a ball. The most usual tactic is to lure the opponent into the net (by making low shots), and then expect he bounces against a mid-height ball close to the net, or if he manages to return, call in a long lob, leaving the opponent with no chances of returning the ball. With harder hitting characters, it is possible to make strong and accurate returns after the serve, which the computer-controlled player rarely manages to return.<br />While managing to make perfect use of the lob and normal shot aim is essential to play the game, top spins can be more a nuisance than helpful. Since it shares the same button as dives, and a good top spin shot requires additional power control (by either pressing up or down), Sega's 8 direction pads, if broken or dirty, or even simply if the finger slipped, top spin shots often ended up turning into a dive, the ball passing helplessly by the player.<br /><br /><br />Characters<br />The only real tennis player is (unsurprisingly) Pete Sampras. All players, however, have different ratings for base line, service, speed and volleys, and there is a noticeable difference between left and right handed players. Not all players can be used in the World Tour mode, as some of them are actual opponents.<br /><br /><br />Events<br /> <br />Pairs on Hard CourtThere are only three surfaces to choose from (Grass, Hard and Clay) and there aren't any differences between them (which is considered the biggest flaw in the game). There are several places where matches and tournaments in the Huge Tour take place, and they are accurate on the kind of surface that tournament actually uses: London (Wimbledon) is played on grass, Paris (Roland Garros) on clay, New York (Flushing Meadows) on hard court, etc. Each surface has three different sets, with the scoreboard on the left, right or middle. This is probably one indication of the court in use: most games during Huge Tour tournaments are played in the sided scoreboard courts, except the final.<br /><br /><br />Game modes<br />The game has three main modes: Challenge match, Tournament and World Tour.<br /><br /><br />Challenge Match<br />Challenge matches are simple head-to-head matches, where everything can be customized, from game length (1/3/5 sets), location and the kind of game (singles or doubles). All players can be chosen (including opponents in the World Tour), and if the J-Cart is in use, 4 players can play simultaneously.<br /><br /><br />Tournament<br />Tournament is the "party" mode. From four to eight players can compete head to head in a knockout competition until the best two matchup in the final. Although it is not possible to change the match length (5 sets only), each player can choose an handicap, from none to three sets.<br /><br /><br />World Tour<br />The single-player only game mode, the world tour is a one set only, composed by 18 rounds across the globe. Some of the players are not available (Sampras included) since they are opponents during the tournament. Since the game is easy, this mode can be beaten in few days.<br /><br />By inserting the Zeppelin password, two extra modes are unlocked: Crazy Tennis and Huge Tour.<br /><br /><br />Crazy Tennis<br /> <br />Crazy TennisCrazy Tennis is one arcadish mode where players get points from simply hitting the ball. There is one overall sense of wackiness in this mode, as some lower balls are blocked by a popup racket on the net, some powerups increase the size of the ball or allow direct control of its path, and there is even a cameo from Dizzy, who walks on the net and works as a piñata. After five hits Dizzy breaks, giving several points to the last player who hit the ball. Players can get points from hitting the ball, breaking Dizzy and winning the point, which aggregates all the points played since the last service (which is done automatically by a machine, instead of a player). The game is timed, and both players must achieve the target score - if one of them reaches the timer without the required score, the game ends and the player with the higher score is declared winner.<br /><br /><br />Huge Tour<br />The huge tour is a complete competition, nearly a season simulation. There are both men, women and mixed tournaments, for the highest rewarded a minimum place in the ranking is required. So, in order to win the Australian Open (the season opener) one must first complete a season first. Up to eight players can compete at the same time, the match length is the official: five games for men, three for women.<br />It is strange as how this mode is only included as a cheat extra. However, the lack of a fatigue meter suggests this was either an actual extra mode or one incomplete feature that the developers decided to include in the cart.<div class="blogger-post-footer"><img width='1' height='1' src='https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/tracker/11284572-112280549982371795?l=segaroms.blogspot.com'/></div>Murat Alperennoreply@blogger.com5tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-11284572.post-1122805403654883422005-07-31T03:22:00.000-07:002005-07-31T03:23:23.656-07:00Mortal Kombat 3Mortal Kombat 3 is the third game in the Mortal Kombat series. It was updated into Ultimate Mortal Kombat 3, and later Mortal Kombat Trilogy.<br /> <br /><br />New characters<br />MK3 introduces:<br /><br />Cyrax: yellow Lin Kuei cyber ninja, ordered to assist Sektor in capturing the renegade Lin Kuei Sub-Zero. <br />Kabal: a mutilated Black Dragon. <br />Motaro: Centaur general of Shao Kahn's extermination squads and the game's Sub-Boss. <br />Nightwolf: Native American shaman). <br />Sektor: red Lin Kuei cyber ninja, volunteered for automation to prove his loyalty, ordered to capture Sub-Zero. <br />Sheeva: Shokan warrior, Sindel's personal protector, rival of Motaro. <br />Sindel: resurrected queen of Outworld. <br />Kurtis Stryker: riot cop, lone survivor of an attack on a major city by one of Shao Kahn's extermination squads. <br /><br />Returning characters<br />Jax, Kano, Kung Lao, Liu Kang, Shang Tsung, Shao Kahn, Sonya Blade, Sub-Zero, as well as a hidden character: Smoke, who first appeared in Mortal Kombat II, converted into a cyber-ninja, and Noob Saibot a hidden warrior you can only fight with a Kombat Kode.<br /><br /><br />New to the series<br />MK3 introduced the "Run" button, accompanied by a "Run" meter, allowing the character to run. <br />MK3 also introduced "chain combos", also known as "dial-a-combos" (many other fighting games at the time had similar combo systems). These supplement the existing juggle combo system, but critics contend that dial-a-combos are redundant and needlessly add to the learning curve of the game. <br />MK3 introduced the long-rumored Animality, where the character transforms into an animal in order to kill your opponent. <br />MK3 also introduced "Mercy," allowing a beaten foe to recover a sliver of life and continue fighting. This is necessary to perform an Animality. <br /><br />Storyline<br />Fed up with continuous losses in tournament battle, Shao Kahn who had lost the Outworld tournament in 1994, enacts a 10,000 year-old plan. He would have his Shadow Priests, led by Shang Tsung, revive his former Queen Sindel, who unexpectedly died at a young age. However, she wouldn't be revived in the Outworld. She would be resurrected in the Earth Realm. This would allow Shao Kahn to cross the boundary lines and reclaim his queen. By 1995, the plan was ready and operating.<br /><br />When Sindel is reincarnated in Earth Realm, Shao Kahn reaches across the dimensions to reclaim her. As a consequence of his action, the Earth Realm becomes a part of the Outworld, killing billions instantly. Only a few are spared, as Raiden protects their souls. He tells them that Shao Kahn must be stopped, but he cannot interfere; due to his status, he has no power in Outworld, and Earth Realm is partially merged with Outworld.<br /><br />Shao Kahn has unleashed extermination squads to roam throughout the Earth Realm and kill any survivors. Also, Raiden's protection only extends to the soul, not to the body, so his chosen warriors have to fight the extermination squads and repel Shao Kahn.<br /><br />Mortal Kombat 3 follows Mortal Kombat II, and precedes Ultimate Mortal Kombat 3, Mortal Kombat Trilogy, and Mortal Kombat Advance.<div class="blogger-post-footer"><img width='1' height='1' src='https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/tracker/11284572-112280540365488342?l=segaroms.blogspot.com'/></div>Murat Alperennoreply@blogger.com1tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-11284572.post-1122805328268401222005-07-31T03:21:00.000-07:002005-07-31T03:22:08.270-07:00Mortal Kombat IIMortal Kombat II <br /> <br />Developer Midway Games <br />Publisher Midway Games <br />Release date 1993 <br />Genre Fighting <br />Modes Up to 2 players <br />Cabinet Standard <br />Arcade system Midway T Unit hardware<br />CPU: TMS34010 (@ 6.25 Mhz)<br />Sound CPU : ADSP2105 (@ 10 Mhz)<br />Sound Chips : DMA-driven (@ 10 Mhz) <br />Monitor Raster resolution 400 x 254 (Horizontal) Palette Colors 32768 <br />Input 8-way joystick, Buttons: 5 (HP, LP, BLOCK, HK, LK) <br />Ports Arcade, Super Nintendo, Sega Genesis, Sega Saturn, Sega 32X, Game Boy, Game Gear <br />Mortal Kombat II is the second game in the Mortal Kombat fighting game series.<br /><br /><br /><br />New characters<br />Baraka: Tarkatan warlord. <br />Jax: A member of the Special Forces and a longtime comrade of Sonya Blade, who enters the tournament to rescue Sonya from Shao Khan. <br />Kintaro: Shokan warrior, general of Shao Kahn's army, and Goro's successor. <br />Kitana: Shao Kahn's personal assassin, and step-daughter. <br />Kung Lao: Shaolin monk and friend of Liu Kang, who seeks to avenge the destruction of the Shaolin Temple. <br />Mileena: Shao Kahn's personal assassin, and Kitana's clone. <br />Reptile: Shang Tsung's personal bodyguard. <br />Shao Kahn: the Emperor of Outworld. <br />Reptile appeared in the original Mortal Kombat, but this is the first game where he is playable and contains his own moveset.<br /><br />MKII also contains three hidden unplayable characters. They are incredibly fast and very unbalanced.<br /><br />Smoke: Sub-Zero's friend, emits puffs of smoke from his body. <br />Jade: Another Outworld assassin, who cannot be hit by projectiles. <br />Noob Saibot: Evil dark ninja, a lost warrior from a previous Mortal Kombat. <br /><br />Returning characters<br />Johnny Cage- Hollywood movie star who joins Liu Kang in his journey to Outworld. <br />Liu Kang- The Shaolin monk who is the reigning champion of Mortal Kombat. Travels to Outworld to seek revenge for the death of his fellow monks. <br />Sub-Zero- The Ice Warrior returns to resume his mission from the previous tournament, and vows to complete his failed objective this time. <br />Scorpion- The Hell spawned spectre who returns to the tournament to once again assassinate Sub-Zero, the man who murdered him long ago... <br />Shang Tsung- The evil sorceror who has convinced Shao Khan to spare his life after losing the last tournament, with a new evil plan to appease his master Shao Khan, who in turn also restores Tsung's youth, making him more mobile and agile. Is also the man Sub-Zero has been sent in to kill. <br />Raiden- The Thunder God who returns to Mortal Kombat to stop Shao Khan's evil plans of taking the Earthrealm as for his own. <br />Sonya Blade and Kano also appear in Mortal Kombat II as background characters. They are seen chained to the pedistals that link to Shao Khan's throne in the "Khan's Arena" stage.<br /><br /><br />New to the series<br />As Midway's technology and experience improved, they increased the resolution of their characters and stages and improved the character designs. The series' story begins to flesh out in this game as well. <br />MKII's characters have multiple Fatalities and more special moves, and stage Fatalities have been added for the Pit II, the Kombat Tomb and the Dead Pool. <br />In addition to more Fatalities, MKII also introduces the Babality (turns your opponent into a diaper-clad infant) and Friendship (do something nice to your opponent rather than kill them) finishers. <br />Dropped the Test Your Might minigame. <br /><br />Storyline<br />One or two years following his defeat, Shang Tsung begs his master, Shao Kahn, to spare his life. He tells Kahn that the invitation for Mortal Kombat cannot be turned down, and if they hold it in Outworld, the Earth Realm warriors must attend. Kahn agrees to this plan, and restores Tsung's youth. He extends the invitation to Raiden, who gathers his warriors and takes them into Outworld. The tournament is dangerous, as Shao Kahn has the home field advantage, and an Outworld victory will unbalance the furies and allow Outworld to subsume Earth Realm.<br /><br />Mortal Kombat II follows Mortal Kombat and precedes Mortal Kombat Trilogy.<br /><br /><br />Trivia<br />Mortal Kombat II is considered the best game in the series. <br />After the low sales of the Super NES port of the first game against the Genesis one, Nintendo didn't censor the blood and fatalities as they did before in the Super NES port of Mortal Kombat II, altough they slapped a warning label in the front of the game box. As a result, the Super NES version sold much better than any other version and was considered at that time the best port of the arcade game.<div class="blogger-post-footer"><img width='1' height='1' src='https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/tracker/11284572-112280532826840122?l=segaroms.blogspot.com'/></div>Murat Alperennoreply@blogger.com3tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-11284572.post-1122805258175785132005-07-31T03:20:00.000-07:002005-07-31T03:20:58.186-07:00Mortal KombatThis article concerns the fighting game. For the movie based on the game, see Mortal Kombat (movie). <br />Mortal Kombat <br /> <br />Developer Midway <br />Publisher Midway <br />Release date 1992 <br />Genre Fighting <br />Modes Up to 2 players simultaneously <br />Cabinet Standard <br />Arcade system Midway Y Unit hardware<br />Main CPU: TMS34010 (@ 6.25 Mhz)<br /><br />Sound CPU: M6809 (@ 2 Mhz)<br /><br /> <br />Monitor Raster resolution 400 x 254 (Horizontal) Palette Colors 32768 <br />Input Joystick; 6 buttons <br />Mortal Kombat is a 1992 fighting game by Midway. It was popular because of its realistic, digitized graphics mixed with bloody and brutal action. This differentiated it from the hand-drawn, more anime-like graphics of competing games like Street Fighter II.<br /><br /><br /><br />Overview<br />Mortal Kombat was developed as a reaction to the popular Capcom game Street Fighter II, with simpler controls and digitized graphics. Some say the game's graphic violence was gratuitous, and was only included in order to generate a public outcry and controversy that would garner publicity for the game.<br /><br />Although highly controversial, the mix of realism and violence propelled Mortal Kombat to widespread renown. The game included many innovations over earlier fighting games such as Street Fighter II. These innovations included digitized graphics, fatalities, and a specialized control system.<br /><br />An example of the game's innovations was the Fatality, a special finishing move executed against a beaten opponent to kill them in a gruesome fashion. For example, one character would grasp a defeated, wobbling opponent by the head, then rip the head and spine out of the opponent's body, which then crumpled to the ground in a pool of blood. Fatalities could only be executed after you had defeated your opponent in combat, and served as an ornamental restatement of victory rather than a dynamic of gameplay.<br /><br />The game's violence and graphics were not the only innovations Mortal Kombat brought to the fighting game world.<br /><br />Mortal Kombat introduced a new combo system called juggling. Juggling is an aspect of gameplay that became a recurring element in games that followed. The juggle involved following an initial successful combat hit with moves that kept the opponent in mid-air, hence rendering the opponent unable to defend subsequent moves of the juggle until falling to the ground and standing again.<br /><br />Mortal Kombat also deviated from Street Fighter in the way moves were performed. Street Fighter (and many other fighting games) performed all special moves in variations of circles on your joystick followed by a button press (half circle back, half circle forward, forward then half circle forward). Mortal Kombat was the first to introduce moves that not only were not-half circles (tap back, tap back, punch) but also introduced moves that did not require a button press (such as tap back, tap back, then forward).<br /><br />These innovations allowed Mortal Kombat to succeed where so many Street Fighter clones had failed.<br /><br /><br />Legacy<br />Midway created five sequels for the arcade and home systems, each one bloodier, more brutal, and stranger than the last. Mortal Kombat 4 brought the series into 3D, replacing the digitized fighters of the previous games with polygon models, while Mortal Kombat: Deadly Alliance was the first in the series to skip arcades altogether and go directly to consoles, a symptom of U.S. arcade market's dramatic decline. The newest installment in the series, Mortal Kombat: Deception, was released for the Xbox and PlayStation 2 platforms in October 2004 (with a Nintendo GameCube version released in February 2005). Following a gameplay style very similar to the one found on Deadly Alliance, Deception also features several new gaming modes, such as a Tetris-like puzzle and a chess game, as well as a suicidal finishing move for each character, usually performed to prevent the opponent from doing a fatality.<br /><br />Finishing moves in later games included the Animality (turning into animal to violently finish off the opponent), the Brutality (decimating an opponent into pieces with a long combination of hits or combo), the Friendship (offering one's opponent a token of friendship), and the Babality (transforming the opponent into a baby). The Babality and Friendship moves were created as a jokey non-violent finishing move, a swipe at the US Congressional Investigation for Violence in Videogames who came down harshly on the Mortal Kombat games. Purists, fonder of the earlier style, were upset by the introduction of such finishing moves, yet Mortal Kombat's "purely violent" and dark gameplay was once again implemented after the release of Mortal Kombat 4.<br /><br />Throughout the series, the game was noted for its simplicity of controls and the exotic special moves it featured.<br /><br /><br />Easter eggs and secrets<br />Mortal Kombat was among the first titles in the fighting game genre to include secret characters, secret games, and other Easter eggs. Mortal Kombat 3, for example, including a hidden game of Galaxian. In the 1992 original, by executing a Fatality when fighting on The Pit stage (the bridge) without taking any damage or pressing the block button in the winning round, the player could fight Reptile, a merge between the Sub-Zero and Scorpion characters. In Mortal Kombat II, Reptile would be developed into a full character with his own special moves and would be available from the outset. Carrying on in this tradition, if the player won 50 consecutive fights he/she would come face to face with the black ninja Noob Saibot, which originates from the last names of the lead designer John Tobias and lead programmer Ed Boon spelled backwards. It was pioneering ideas like these that has made Mortal Kombat one of the most memorable of the beat 'em up genre. Other Easter eggs appeared in Mortal Kombat II. After landing a strong upper-cut against the opponent, the face of Dan Forden, a lead programmer, would appear in the lower-right corner of the screen and shout, "Toasty!". If the player very quickly held down and hit the start button before Dan's head left the screen, they would then instantly begin a new stage against a secret character named Smoke (a grey-costumed version of Scorpion that emits puffs of smoke). Another secret character was named Jade (a more difficult, very fast, green-costumed version of Kitana). To fight Jade, a player would have to defeat their opponent before the mystery "?" stage using nothing but low kicks. In The Living Forest stage both Smoke and Jade could sometimes be found peeking behind the trees during battle.<br /><br />Another Easter egg actually came about from a rumored glitch. In the original arcade version of the first Mortal Kombat, a rumor stated that the game would sometimes present problems due to a bug and mix two characters together. This would usually be two of the ninja characters, resulting in a ninja in a semi-red suit. The computer would display his name as "ERMAC", short for "error macro." As word spread, people thought they had found a secret character. That wasn't the case, yet in Ultimate Mortal Kombat 3, it was decided to make an actual Ermac character. Also, glitch characters occurred in the very rare instance of a player reaching Reptile on an endurance level (rare due to the fact that not only did one have to have the condition's set for being able to reach Reptile, but then one was required to beat two characters without being hurt or using the block button on the harder levels). Once Reptile was defeated, the second character would jump down. As Reptile used a special green colour pallette, the following fighter (a normal fighter) would be a jumble of the characters original colours plus Reptile's green colours.<br /><br />However, one of the most fascinating elements of Mortal Kombat was completely unplanned and out of the programmers' hands. Following the release of Mortal Kombat II, a myth culture was created around the game. The most famous one is the Goro myth. In the first game, Goro was a four armed monster that acted as a miniboss to the game's main boss, Shang Tsung. Many fans were convinced that Goro was hidden somewhere in Mortal Kombat II and many were obsessed with finding him. The UK's GamesMaster magazine (also a popular TV Show on Channel 4) received numerous letters asking about where to find Goro. Much searching was done, both by fans and the computer game press, until in 1995 GamesMaster concluded, "We are positive Goro isn't to be found in Mortal Kombat II, we are positive he would have been found by now."<br /><br />Two similar non-existent hidden characters were "Torch", and "Hornbuckle." In Mortal Kombat II there is a location called The Pit II. Far in the background of this stage there is another bridge across the chasm. Standing stationary on this bridge are two fighters: one of them is a Liu Kang sprite with green pants who was named Hornbuckle by fans. One of Jade's hints was "Hornbuckle who?", which people thought was the name of a hidden fighter, and was apparently given to the guy opposite "Torch" on the Pit II. If you watch the ending credits, one of the programmers last names is Hornbuckle. Just a bit of MK humor. The other fighter, is a humanoid character that seems to be made of fire. As these two characters never move, it's been suggested that the "other fighter" is actually a funeral pyre. Finally, there is a cloaked figure who floats in front of the window during fights in The Tower, and Portal stages in MK2. This character was dubbed Cloak by fans, and was assumed to be a hidden character.<br /><br />The character of Torch, who had been very popular with fans, eventually showed up as a playable character in Mortal Kombat: Deadly Alliance. Unfortunately, due to trademark issues, he had to be called Blaze instead of Torch. Despite Cloak's popularity with fans, he has never shown up as a fighter (playable or otherwise) in any Mortal Kombat game.<br /><br /><br />Storylines<br />The annual Shaolin Tournament promises to be a good one. The best of the best will gather from far and wide to put their skills to the ultimate test. It seems like it will be a wonderful day of fighting.<br /><br />When everyone leasts expects it, a seemly old sorcerer and a strange four-armed creature appear and corrupt the tournament. This Shokan warrior was the half-human, half-dragon fighter named Goro, who became the ultimate fighting champion by defeating the Great Kung Lao. Because this 2,000 year-old monster has been the undefeated champion for the past 500 years, he made little work of all participating fighters. This was all part of Shang Tsung's plan to tip the balance into chaos and help the Outworld conquer the Earth Realm.<br /><br />However, this was going to be a bit impossible. In 1992, Raiden, the thunder god, saw this and he would go and take care of Shang Tsung. However, even though he had the powers of a god, this was going to be a bit of a problem. He would need some Earth Realm-born fighters to help him out. Of course, Liu Kang would help, since it's his country's tournament. Other fighters also took part in the melee. They included martial artist/movie star Johnny Cage, Lin Kuei ninja Sub-Zero, and Shirai Ryu ninja Scorpion.<br /><br />Kano, the Black Dragon's most diabolical thug, was getting chased a by a U.S. Special Forces Unit, led by Lt. Sonya Blade, when we received a vision from Shang Tsung to lure them towards his tournament. Once Kano arrives, he would have his personal army ambush them. Kano manages to get away and into the tournament, while most of the Special Forces Unit got caught in the surprise attack. So, Sonya had no choice but to take part in the tournament, in order to save her team.<br /><br />Raiden would also participate in the tournament, but he would have to take the form of a human in order to do so. So, the tournament was set. With the Earth Realm already having lost 9 tournaments in a row, our heroes must avoid handing the Earth Realm its 10th loss in a row, or all of humanity will crumble to the darkness of the Outworld.<br /><br /><br />Bosses<br />Mortal Kombat featured two bosses. One was a sub boss (in which you'd have to face before challenging the main boss of the game). The Sub Boss of the game was a four armed shokan warrior named Goro, a half human, half dragon beast. Despite fact that he wasn't really fast, he was considered to be tough to beat. Upon defeat of Goro would the player then have the right to face the game's boss Shang Tsung. Tsung was an old man who was in fact incredibly fast and shot out skull fitreballs at will. He also had the ability to morph into any character of the game and not only assume their identity but their special moves too (Goro was the character Tsung most notoriously morphed into on a continuious basis). Upon defeat, the many warrior souls that Shang Tsung used during battle would leave his body and then would he be engulfed in flames.<br /><br />Mortal Kombat's trend of using the sub boss would set the trend that the future Mortal Kombat games would follow. While most sub bosses would be hideous monsters like a Shokan, Centaur or an Oni, Mortal Kombat: Deception would break this trend by replacing the character Noob Smoke as a sub boss.<br /><br /><br />Movies and television<br />Mortal Kombat was adapted into two major motion pictures, Mortal Kombat, and Mortal Kombat: Annihilation. Both had a poor critical reception at the time they were released, but the first movie was a major financial success, eventually grossing over $125,000,000 worldwide and starting the Hollywood career of Paul W. S. Anderson. A third movie, Mortal Kombat: Devastation, is said to be in pre-production as confirmed officially, and will be released some time between 2005 and 2006.<br /><br />The franchise also sparked two TV series, the animated series Mortal Kombat: Defenders of the Realm and the live-action Mortal Kombat: Conquest. Neither series ran for more than one season despite the popularity of Conquest. In 1995 an animated TV movie was released titled Mortal Kombat: The Journey Begins.<br /><br /><br />Ports<br /> <br />Mortal Kombat cartridge for the Game Gear.From a marketing perspective, the 1993 launch of Mortal Kombat for video game consoles by Acclaim was probably the largest launch of a video game up until that time. A "Mortal Monday" TV campaign featured a flood of TV advertisements, which were unusual for video games at that time, and all four home versions of the game were made available for sale on the same date.<br /><br />When the first game in the series was released for the SNES in North America, Nintendo of America held a strict "Family Friendly" policy towards the content of the games released on their systems, this included the removal of graphic violence, religious imagery and themes; mention of death, sexual themes, and other sensitive subjects. Henceforth, the first Mortal Kombat game on the SNES had the blood recolored gray in order to pass it off as sweat, and the various Fatality moves were graphically changed to be less gruesome. The SNES version was graphicaly superior to the Genesis port, but all violence was censored. The success of Mortal Kombat on Genesis drove Nintendo to rethink its censorship policies.<br /><br />After this, Nintendo began to concede on their policies, and the SNES version of Mortal Kombat II was released with the violence fully intact with a warning label on the game's packaging. Nintendo later allowed other publishers to make games with sensitive subject material following the advent of various video game content rating systems. In Japan, the game was also released for the Japanese version of the SNES, the Super Famicom.<br /><br />Ports:<br /><br />Sega Genesis/Sega Mega Drive (1992) - the American Sega Genesis version was censored, but entering a secret code (a-b-a-c-a-b-b) restores the blood and the actual fatalities from the arcade version. In 1993 a Sega CD version of the game was released with arcade quality sound, a grainy version of the famous Mortal Monday commercial and loading times. The Sega CD version did not require a code to be entered and this was given an MA-17 rating by the Video Games Rating Council. <br />Amiga (1993) <br />Game Boy (1993) <br />IBM PC (1993) <br />Sega Master System (1993) <br />Sega Game Gear (1993) <br />SNES/Super Famicom (1993) - Because Nintendo of America had a problem with the depiction of blood, the SNES replaces blood with yellowish sweat and all fatalities that involve decapitation or mutilation are modified or replaced. <br />The game has been ported illegally to the Famicom in Asia. It has appeared in several multicarts in China. <br /><br />Sequels<br />Mortal Kombat II <br />Mortal Kombat 3 <br />Ultimate Mortal Kombat 3 <br />Mortal Kombat Trilogy <br />Mortal Kombat 4 <br />Mortal Kombat Gold <br />Mortal Kombat Advance <br />Mortal Kombat: Deadly Alliance <br />Mortal Kombat: Tournament Edition <br />Mortal Kombat: Deception <br />There was also a separate game starring the character of Sub-Zero called Mortal Kombat Mythologies: Sub-Zero. This was a platform game rather than a fighting game. This and as well as having an extremely complicated storyline and sluggish gameplay, the game received negative reviews from its inception and it became widely regarded as a disappointing and lackluster endeavour.<br /><br />Another interesting Mortal Kombat game is Mortal Kombat: Special Forces, which is an action game that was originally supposed to star Jax and Sonya. Due to Midway cutting a lot of corners after Tobias left, Sonya wasn't in the game. This game was an even bigger failure than Mythologies, and the series has fallen to its lowest point in 1999, a few years after reaching its peak with Mortal Kombat 3 and its updates (UMK3 and Trilogy). This caused Midway to take some time off and refocus.<br /><br />Another game, Mortal Kombat: Shaolin Monks, has been confirmed and will be released in September or October 2005.<br /><br /><br />Plot continuity<br />One interesting aspect of the Mortal Kombat series' plot is that every single game features a different ending for every character. Because many endings in a single game will contradict each other, only one or a few per game are considered canon, and the true endings are never known until the next game is released. The result is that when a new Mortal Kombat game is released, fans speculate about which ending (or endings) are real.<br /><br />Nearly every game's canon ending involves the good guys emerging triumphant over evil, though this trend was broken with the release of Mortal Kombat: Deception, which revealed that Earthrealm's warriors in Deadly Alliance had failed to prevent Shang Tsung and Quan Chi from resurrecting the Dragon King's army, and that all of them (including Raiden) had died as a result.<br /><br /><br />Mortal Kombat crossovers<br />Mortal Kombat has also been the focus of several extremely popular game modifications, including hacks to the original Mortal Kombat PC games (MK2: Kintaro's Vulgar Version), and the integration of console artwork and audio into other game engines, including but not limited to the original Quake and Unreal engines (Mortal Kombat Quake TC).<div class="blogger-post-footer"><img width='1' height='1' src='https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/tracker/11284572-112280525817578513?l=segaroms.blogspot.com'/></div>Murat Alperennoreply@blogger.com6tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-11284572.post-1122805180695059432005-07-31T03:19:00.000-07:002005-07-31T03:19:40.696-07:00Micro MachinesMicro Machines were a line of toys made by Galoob (now part of Hasbro) in the late 1980's and early 1990's. Micro Machines were literally that; tiny 'N' scale component style "Playsets" and vehicles (approx 1 inch / 2 cm long) including miniature cars, trucks, trains, emergency vehicles, tanks, boats, helicopters, monster trucks, and motorcycles. The list enlarged over time, with many special editions being released in limited numbers (for example, the 'Bigfoot' monster truck Micro Machine). Star Trek and Star Wars models were also made, as were models from other science fiction franchises.<br /><br />Contents <br />1 Video games <br />1.1 Micro Machines <br />1.2 Micro Machines 2 <br />1.3 Micro Machines 3 <br />1.4 Micro Machines 64 <br />2 External Links <br /> <br /><br /><br /><br />Video games<br />The toy range spawned a range of related computer and video games on several formats (including Amiga, Mega Drive/Genesis, Game Boy, PS2).<br /><br />Micro Machine games are departures from normal computer racing games; instead of powerful Formula 1 cars, you race toy cars around home-made courses, such as Dad's desktop or Mom's kitchen, each with its own obstacles.<br /><br /><br />Micro Machines<br />Release year: 1993 The first game in the series laid the foundation of the gameplay: a top-down racing game with miniature vehicles. The tracks were themed very differently, races take place on a billiard table or in a garden.<br /><br /><br />Micro Machines 2<br />Release year: 1995 Not only do you have cars that require different handling techniques for each course, but in Micro Machines 2 you even get to steer a hovercraft or a helicopter. There are also different playing modes which include innovative "head-to-head", in which you get points when you're so fast you drive out of the screen while your opponent is still in the back part of the screen.<br /><br /><br />Micro Machines 3<br />Release year: 1997 The last PC-game in the series featured 3D-graphics and 8-player multiplayer matches.<br /><br /><br />Micro Machines 64<br />A 3d console version of the game<div class="blogger-post-footer"><img width='1' height='1' src='https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/tracker/11284572-112280518069505943?l=segaroms.blogspot.com'/></div>Murat Alperennoreply@blogger.com6tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-11284572.post-1122805110477147492005-07-31T03:18:00.000-07:002005-07-31T03:18:30.480-07:00MoonwalkerFor other uses of the term "moonwalk", see moonwalk. <br /><br />Moonwalker, also known as Michael Jackson: Moonwalker, was a movie released in 1988 by singer Michael Jackson. Rather than featuring one continuous narrative, the film is a collection of short films about the entertainer, several of which are long form music videos from Jackson's Bad album.<br /><br />Contents <br />1 Original release <br />2 Plot <br />2.1 Man in the Mirror <br />2.2 Jackson's biography <br />2.3 Badder <br />2.4 Speed Bunny <br />2.5 Leave Me Alone <br />2.6 Smooth Criminal <br />2.7 Come Together <br />3 Arcade game <br />4 External links <br /> <br /><br /><br /><br />Original release<br />Moonwalker was originally released to co-incide with Jackson's 1987 album, Bad. During the cinema release for Moonwalker, Jackson was also embarking on a world tour.<br /><br /><br />Plot<br />The movie consists of several segments, including (in chronological order):<br /><br />Spoiler warning: Plot and/or ending details follow.<br /><br />Man in the Mirror<br />The music video to Jackson's song Man in the Mirror acts as the opening segment to the film. This short film features a montage of clips of children from Africa, Martin Luther King, and other historical figures.<br /><br /><br />Jackson's biography<br />A short biographical film about Jackson, covering from his birth, to the release of the Bad album.<br /><br /><br />Badder<br />A parody of the music video for Bad's title song, featuring children filling the roles of various people in the original clip.<br /><br /><br />Speed Bunny<br />The Badder clip moves into a second short film, referred to as 'Speed Bunny', that makes extensive use of Claymation techniques, and acts as the music video to the song Speed Demon. In the film, Michael, in an attempt to avoid overzealous fans, disguises himself as a rabbit(named Spike), but ends up taunting the fans into chasing him. During the chase, he morphs into other celebrities, including Sylvester Stallone and Pee-Wee Herman. After finally losing the fans, he removes the costume, which comes to life and dances with him. In the end, a policeman tells him he is in a "No Moonwalking Zone", and just as jackson was expecting a ticket, the officer was also a fan and ironically, asked him for his autograph.<br /><br /><br />Leave Me Alone<br />The fifth segment of the film is the short film for the song Leave me alone, and features an animated music video focusing on media interest in Jackson's life.<br /><br /><br />Smooth Criminal<br />The main segment of the film centers around the song Smooth Criminal, where Jackson is a 1930's style gangster, with the 'power' to morph into a spaceship, or a futuristic car. This long form version of the music video includes the "Smooth Criminal" short form clip, where Jackson dances through a 1930s style New Orleans jazz club. The antagonist is "Mr.Big" Frankie Lideo played by Joe Pesci with an entire SWAT-like foot soldier army of heavily-armored black-clad henchmen who have Michael outnumbered and outgunned. The supporting characters are three children; one named Katie who was captured by Lideo's stormtroopers and almost became a test subject for his new drug.<br /><br /><br />Come Together<br />The film closes with Jackson performing a cover of The Beatles' song Come Together - it must not be a coincidence that one of the child actors in this movie is John Lennon's son, Sean.<br /><br /><br />Arcade game<br /> <br />Box cover of Michael Jackson's Moonwalker video gameMoonwalker was developed into an arcade and video game by company Sega. The home version of the game was released for Sega's Genesis/Mega Drive and Master System home video game systems. The games involved the player controlling the pop star in a quest to save children that had been kidnapped by an evil gangster. The game's levels and music were borrowed from the music video and the player had the ability to destroy enemies by making them dance. A sequel was planned, but after the accusations that Jackson molested children in 1993 Sega did not feel it was appropriate to have a game where the pop star saved children.<div class="blogger-post-footer"><img width='1' height='1' src='https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/tracker/11284572-112280511047714749?l=segaroms.blogspot.com'/></div>Murat Alperennoreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-11284572.post-1122804999363306552005-07-31T03:16:00.000-07:002005-07-31T03:16:39.366-07:00Lemmings 2Lemmings 2: The Tribes<br />From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.<br />Lemmings 2: The Tribes <br /> <br />Developer(s) DMA Design <br />Publisher(s) Psygnosis <br />Release date(s) 1993 <br />Genre Puzzle <br />Mode(s) Single player <br />Rating(s) ESRB: Everyone (E) <br />Platform(s) Commodore Amiga, various <br />Media Three 3 1/2" floppy disks, Cartridge <br />Input Mouse, Gamepad <br />Lemmings 2: The Tribes is a computer game released in 1993, as the first real sequel to the popular puzzle game Lemmings. As the original, it was developed by DMA Design and published by Psygnosis. The gameplay remained mostly the same as the original game, requiring you to lead all the lemmings to their exit by giving them the appropriate "skills".<br /><br /><br />Overview<br />Numerous changes and additions were made in this sequel. First of all, there was an introduction movie explaining the storyline of the game. Secondly, there were now many, many more skills available to give to the lemmings, unlike the eight in the original game. There was still a total of 120 levels, but in this game they were divided into ten levels for each of the twelve tribes.<br /><br />Lemmings 2 was not quite as popular as Lemmings, and was not ported to other systems as much as the original game was. Despite this, it was well received and considered by many as a worthy sequel. One apparently common complaint was that the many different skills were too confusing to players, despite the game's "Practice Mode".<br /><br /><br />Storyline<br />Once upon a time, the twelve lemming tribes of Lemming Island lived happily and peacefully. One day, however, a great darkness fell upon their land, as foretold in an ancient prophecy. This prophecy told that the only way the lemmings could survive was by evacuating their island, using the power of the Lemming Talisman. This talisman consisted of twelve pieces, one owned by each tribe. With the help of the Guide that has helped them before, all lemmings must now reach the center point of their island in order to escape their doom.<br /><br /><br />Gameplay<br />The gameplay in Lemmings 2 differs from the original in the following ways:<br /><br />As mentioned before, there are many more (over 60) skills available in the game, although no more than eight are available in each level. Some of the skills are similar to the original ones (like digging and building variants), others are all new (several flying skills, for example). One interesting skill is the "entertainer" which will play a musical instrument and have nearby lemmings do a dance. The instrument and dances they do vary by tribe.<br /><br />A practice mode is added instead of the two-player mode. In this mode, any type of skill available can be selected for the player to experiment with. There is a choice of four different practice levels.<br /><br />Each tribe's levels can be started at any time, and progress can be saved from the main menu. The player starts out with 60 lemmings for each tribe, but only one lemming needs to make it to an exit in order to progress to next level. The amount saved will then be the amount left in the next level. As some levels may require several lemmings to complete, the player might have to replay an earlier level to save more lemmings for the following ones if they realize they do not have enough.<br /><br />The player will be rewarded with a bronze, silver or gold medal, depending on how many lemmings are saved in the level. This will also dictate the type of the talisman part received once all the tribe's levels are completed. To watch the end sequence and credits, all golden talisman parts need to be won.<br /><br />Each tribe has its own graphics set, its own music track, its own "traps" and its own exit animations. Skills however, are not limited to a tribe. The twelve tribes are: Classic, Circus, Cavelem, Shadow, Space, Outdoor, Beach, Sports, Egyptian, Highland, Arctic and Medieval.<br /><br />A new fast forward button and fan button have been added to the controls. The fast forward replaces the release rate button in the original game, which would let you release more lemmings at a time. Now the whole game is sped up, so you can skip longer waiting times. The fan button turns the cursor into a fan, which is used to push around any flying lemmings or to affect wind-powered elements.<br /><br />Smaller additions include:<br /><br />Instead of just dying, lemmings can now hurt themselves, taking a second to get back up to continue walking. <br />Trampolines will let lemmings jump and bounce about. <br />Cannons and catapults in levels will launch a lemming away. <br />Levels can span vertically as well as horizontally (mostly because of the flying skills). <br />Lemmings with permanent skills have their colours switched for easier identification. <br /><br />Ports<br />Known ports of the Amiga game include: DOS, Nintendo Super Famicom (SNES), Nintendo Game Boy, Sega Megadrive, (Genesis), Acorn Archimedes and Atari ST<br /><br />The next game in the Lemmings series after Lemmings 2 is All New World of Lemmings (1994), which continues the storyline with the Egyptian, Shadow and Classic tribes.<div class="blogger-post-footer"><img width='1' height='1' src='https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/tracker/11284572-112280499936330655?l=segaroms.blogspot.com'/></div>Murat Alperennoreply@blogger.com5tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-11284572.post-1122804932947763592005-07-31T03:14:00.000-07:002005-07-31T03:15:32.953-07:00The Lost VikingsThe Lost Vikings is a side-scrolling action game which was developed by Blizzard Entertainment (then known as Silicon & Synapse) and released in 1992 by publisher Interplay Entertainment.<br /><br />The game is based around three vikings, Erik the Swift, Baleog the Fierce and Olaf the Stout, who get kidnapped by an alien for an inter-galactic zoo and become lost in various periods of time. The purpose of the game is to control the three characters (who all have separate abilities) in order to solve puzzles to escape and get back home.<br /><br />The game was originally released for the Super Nintendo Entertainment System, then subsequently released for the Amiga, DOS, and Sega Megadrive (Sega Genesis in North America) systems the next year. Blizzard re-released the game for the Game Boy Advance in 2003.<br /><br />The game's sequel, Norse by Norsewest: The Return of the Lost Vikings, features the original three characters plus two new playable characters, a werewolf and a dragon. The gameplay and storyline remain largely the same, though the pre-existing characters all have new or modified abilities.<br /><br />The vikings have also shown up from time to time in other Blizzard games. Olaf can be unlocked as a hidden character in the 1993 game Rock 'N Roll Racing. They most recently appeared as Mobs in Blizzard's MMORPG World of Warcraft in the dungeon Uldaman.<br /><br />Lost Vikings II contains some other links to World of Warcraft. In the "Dark Ages" period of time, Erik the Swift accidentally gets teleported to the Swamp of Sorrows, which is a region in World of Warcraft. Additionally, a recurring NPC in Lost Vikings II is Little Timmy, who is a rarely appearing character in Stormwind City, another region of World of Warcraft.<div class="blogger-post-footer"><img width='1' height='1' src='https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/tracker/11284572-112280493294776359?l=segaroms.blogspot.com'/></div>Murat Alperennoreply@blogger.com0