Yes, that'd be the classic "Judge Spear" fightercraft indeed.
PC Engine Fan X! ^_~
This 100%.
Skykid wrote: Get ready for the big bad world to fuck you up the ass in ways you never believed possible.
Exactly. Still waiting for the EU release that was already rated and officially announced for April 2012...seems it happened in a parallel universe only. Big disappointment.
Was not aware it was skipped over in Europe. Sorry to hear that for your guys. I had the USA version but sold that one as I rarely played anything other than my Japanese 360 at the time.
Yeah, it seems there is an interesting story behind this fuckup. Looks like The German publisher dtp entertainment responsible for the PAL release filed for insolvency one month before the release.
Feels good to finally have a face to the evil that denied us europeans Raiden Fighters Aces. I'm still salty, not gonna lie.
Aces was a port (well, three at it) by some of the original games' devs and it showed, despite the extremely odd refresh rate of the original hardware.Steven wrote: How was Aces running BTW? I'm assuming that it was emulated and not native, but there's always the possibility that it's native. I also never played Aces, or any of the games in it, although Viper Phase 1 is at Mikado along with at least one of the Fighters. Pretty sure it was 2, but I forgot.
Anyway, FPGA isn't inherently better than software emulation, despite what Analogue's marketing might say. Assuming that this collection is good, it doesn't really matter if it's running in a software emulator or not unless you are really interested in such things like I am.
Ah, all those hundreds of people developing cores and fpga devices are just wasting time because we already have MAME. Silly gooses.
Too bad that, basically other than NG and some Capcom, you're not playing properly many arcade games from the 90s on FPGA in 2024, and that doesn't seem to be changing much in the next years. A Groovymame setup, even if not perfectly configured, is a must specially for CRT users.JBC wrote: Ah, all those hundreds of people developing cores and fpga devices are just wasting time because we already have MAME. Silly gooses.
What alternative to emulation would you consider better?
And that's Analogue's marketing: "it's FPGA, so it's automatically better!"
Eh, that's not entirely wrong. It doesn't mean the end product is necessarily better, and I know this is what you're getting at here.