BIL wrote: Aww sheeeit! Feels good to see this confirmed.

BIL wrote: Aww sheeeit! Feels good to see this confirmed.
I will never cease to lament the fact that it hasn't become the norm.Imhotep wrote:yes that article is great, it's cool to have scientific research methods applied to the history of video games.
RBelmont wrote:A little math shows that if you overclock a Pi3 to about 3.4 GHz you'll start to be competitive with PCs from 2002. And you'll also set your house on fire
Don't have time right now, but I love shit like this. Thanks _SKYe.__SKYe wrote:Hey, I don't have anything game related to post at this time, but I did find something pretty cool.
I recently (and by chance, I might add) I came across this website, which contains a series of articles about the history of Sunsoft.
The latest article on Sunsoft's articles was just posted a couple days ago, so I don't know if you are already aware of it, but it is a great read nonetheless.
Only some of their titles have been mentioned yet, so I assume there are more articles still to come.
Decapattack Genesis was changed quite a bit from the original Magical Hat Turbo Adventure MD, though, in this case, I found both to be worth playing. The original played more like Psycho Fox and the altered version became more action oriented.dunpeal2064 wrote: Also (finally) picking up a copy of TNWA. I tend to go for US releases personally, but gameplay-altering localizations are criminal imo. Streets of Rage 3 and Splatterhouse 3 are also jp pickups on my list. I know censorship is a big thing in this era, but are there any other standout games that were effected similarly? Crosses being changed in GnG is fine, actually fucking with the game is very much not!
Wow! that's pretty bad...BrianC wrote:The US version of Captain Silver for the SMS had over half the game removed because SEGA of America got cheap with saving memory space.
Yes.FinalBaton wrote:US Contra Hard Corps is definitely the way to go.
Yeslife bar in a Contra game??? Are you a fucking pussy or what
Bahaha, that's like if NEC couldn't be arsed to release the other half of R-Type on PCE. At least rip 'em off with the double album approach! 3;BrianC wrote:The US version of Captain Silver for the SMS had over half the game removed because SEGA of America got cheap with saving memory space.
Exactly. It's very though, but it's certainly not impossible. Not even close. A no-death run is possible, so that tells you right there that the game is not "impossible" nor "totally unfair".BIL wrote: Having said all this, I viscerally prefer the US one. Grew up with it, and although its "throw the kids in the deep end" (no lifebar) "and strafe the pool if they go for the lifejackets" (no cheats either, motherfucker!) ethos was rough, it's by no means insurmountable. Hardcore: "You probably won't survive. But if you do, you'll be much stronger because you tried."
He's also had many good things to say about Cave Noire. Other popular recommendations here include Mole Miner, SolarStriker, Kaeru no Tame ni Kane wa Naru, Donkey Kong, Batman: The Animated Series, Nemesis II, Trip World, and Chiyuu Kaiho Gun ZAS in addition to the usual first-party stuff.BIL wrote:I've been a bit tempted in the past to nab the Japanese GB Arremer 2... at the time though, there were other games I didn't have in any shape or form that took priority. Even if it's "just" the FC game downsized to GB, it's not easy to resist. ^w^
Ah, OG Gameboy. The most insidious format I've yet encountered! It doesn't take much more than a competent action game hewn out of that cruelly primitive monochrome to win my affection. Recently batted away a very nice Spartan X, just too damn lightweight compared to the original's immortal FC port. Currently rocking ten or so games, Bionic Commando the absolute sidescrolling champ with Contra, Dracula II, Arremer and Ninja Ryukenden filling out the midfield and Rubble Saver's alarming yet endearing "faxed to your GB from grandpa's office circa 1971" MSX-esque for avant garde factor. EDIT: aw cwap! BURGER TIME DX is great too, for more oldschool arcadey-type sidescrolling! (yep, this version does indeed scroll! but IDGAF tbh, single-screen platformers are good here) And a Metroid II is fine too.
As an aside, for topdown shooting everyone should play Totsugeki! Ponkotsu Tank aka Trax, ideally with one life = one credit stipulation. The sense of pummeling, razing devastation via dot-matrix warfare is inordinately gratifying! When those helldozers start levelling entire city blocks on a beeline for your little tank, ho ho hoooly shit. Like certain other cutting-edge action games (Ex Ranza MD, Omega Boost PS1) it both makes me ponder a hardware-upgraded sequel and doubt it needed one. For the love of god - tap the turret rotate button, don't hold it (latter is slow!).
RBelmont wrote:A little math shows that if you overclock a Pi3 to about 3.4 GHz you'll start to be competitive with PCs from 2002. And you'll also set your house on fire
An awesome and evocative quote. I've been hankering for dated, weird ambience in gameplay myself. There's something special about Umihara Kawase---its deranged juxtaposition of, like, Trapper Keeper- and Lisa Frank-scrapbooked characters and textures, over grimly washed-out, pixelated B/W nature photography (Laura Palmer crime scene?), that quite speaks to me.WelshMegalodon wrote:BIL wrote: and Rubble Saver's alarming yet endearing "faxed to your GB from grandpa's office circa 1971" MSX-esque for avant garde factor.
Holy shit, I'd never in a million years have made that connection and now I can't unsee it.dojo_b wrote:There's something special about Umihara Kawase---its deranged juxtaposition of, like, Trapper Keeper- and Lisa Frank-scrapbooked characters and textures, over grimly washed-out, pixelated B/W nature photography (Laura Palmer crime scene?), that quite speaks to me.
The Konami GB Collection games are great, but special mention to both Vol.1 (which contains Gradius, Castlevania and Contra) and Vol. 4 (which contains Gradius II, Castlevania: Belmont's Revenge, Yie-Ar Kung-Fu and Antartic Adventure), which in my opinion are the more interesting compilations.dunpeal2064 wrote:Any word on the Konami GB Collection series for GBC? They seem to contain a lot of solid games, with color to boot, so they seem the way to go assuming everything is in tact.
I think people always did.copy-paster wrote:OMG people now prefer Hard Corps US?