Is part II only a Caravan game? Is there a regular saga as well? No interest if it's just a speed/score affair.Klatrymadon wrote: ↑Wed Jul 09, 2025 1:50 pm I haven't spent much time with Plus, but the two ACA games are unmissable in their own ways. The first plays like a slightly less scrappy version of Thunder Dragon, and is a really fun and rewarding clear barring a couple of nasty chokepoints, but Macross II is quite simply the best caravan shooter ever made — a secret-hunter's paradise.![]()
I'm so glad that Hamster's Arcade Archives are a thing.
Re: I'm so glad that Hamster's Arcade Archives are a thing.
Formerly known as 8 1/2. I return on my second credit!
Re: I'm so glad that Hamster's Arcade Archives are a thing.
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Re: I'm so glad that Hamster's Arcade Archives are a thing.
From watching replays, no I don't think it's a caravan game. I think they were alluding to how much hidden shit there is in the environment (lots of little medals that appear by shooting the right location) that would align well with a short time to set the highest score experience.Jonpachi wrote: ↑Wed Jul 09, 2025 4:23 pmIs part II only a Caravan game? Is there a regular saga as well? No interest if it's just a speed/score affair.Klatrymadon wrote: ↑Wed Jul 09, 2025 1:50 pm I haven't spent much time with Plus, but the two ACA games are unmissable in their own ways. The first plays like a slightly less scrappy version of Thunder Dragon, and is a really fun and rewarding clear barring a couple of nasty chokepoints, but Macross II is quite simply the best caravan shooter ever made — a secret-hunter's paradise.![]()
Re: I'm so glad that Hamster's Arcade Archives are a thing.
Awesome. Thanks all. I'll pick them both up.
Formerly known as 8 1/2. I return on my second credit!
Re: I'm so glad that Hamster's Arcade Archives are a thing.
I think the ACA NeoGeo releases also lack the option to start on the 2p side with the p1 controller, which is a preference option in some of the more recent ACA games.EmperorIng wrote: ↑Wed Jul 02, 2025 5:28 pmFrom my experience with 2 and 3:
-higher lag than other ACA releases
-no multiple autofire settings, just ON and OFF, and ON is less than 30hz (this I noticed when my timing for killing things in SW2 was off the other night) - later ACA releases often have several rates to choose from
-can only map one button for autofire, instead of having multiple buttons for multiple types of autofire
-in Original mode, you can set your lives to 99 and still have your score registered on the leaderboard
-in High Score mode, you are locked into playing Aero Fighters 2/3, there is no way to play the japanese version in High Score Mode
-even worse, autofire is disabled for High Score mode! This is not the case in other aca titles and just makes the whole experience a tedious slog.
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Klatrymadon
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Re: I'm so glad that Hamster's Arcade Archives are a thing.
It's made up of three roughly ten-minute courses (Beginner/Medium/Expert) with three stages each, so it doesn't exactly follow the Compile/Hudson caravan structure but it's definitely geared towards the same kind of score-attacking and optimisation. Crucially, it's played against the clock — you want to score as much as you can before you get to the stage's boss, then speedkill the boss so that you can destroy bonus waves for the remaining few seconds. (It shouldn't give you much trouble but there's also a "clear score", a kind of quota you have to fill on each stage in order to keep playing.)Jonpachi wrote: ↑Wed Jul 09, 2025 4:23 pmIs part II only a Caravan game? Is there a regular saga as well? No interest if it's just a speed/score affair.Klatrymadon wrote: ↑Wed Jul 09, 2025 1:50 pm I haven't spent much time with Plus, but the two ACA games are unmissable in their own ways. The first plays like a slightly less scrappy version of Thunder Dragon, and is a really fun and rewarding clear barring a couple of nasty chokepoints, but Macross II is quite simply the best caravan shooter ever made — a secret-hunter's paradise.![]()
There are enough stages to prevent it from feeling slight, but yeah, this one's all about the speed, eventually!
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Re: I'm so glad that Hamster's Arcade Archives are a thing.
On the USA region Switch eShop portal at 9:00am PST this morning on 6/10/2025, the Switch ACA port of Macross II was a "no show" the second damn time around due the "ironclad hands" of Harmony Gold with it's ownership of the Macross IP namesake (yeah, thanks HG for a job well done -- you guys truly deserve it).
So yes, the American Switch gamers have been denied the ability & opportunity to buy another Macross game on the USA region eShop again -- but that doesn't prevent one from going on the Japan Switch eShop and buying it there to d/l on their Switch any ol' day.
PC Engine Fan X! ^_~
So yes, the American Switch gamers have been denied the ability & opportunity to buy another Macross game on the USA region eShop again -- but that doesn't prevent one from going on the Japan Switch eShop and buying it there to d/l on their Switch any ol' day.
PC Engine Fan X! ^_~
Last edited by PC Engine Fan X! on Thu Jul 10, 2025 4:33 pm, edited 1 time in total.
Re: I'm so glad that Hamster's Arcade Archives are a thing.
Macross II is on US PSN. AFAIK, Harmony Gold only has the rights to the original Macross and Do Your Remember Love.
Macross II showed up for me on NoA's website
Macross II showed up for me on NoA's website
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Re: I'm so glad that Hamster's Arcade Archives are a thing.
Sure enough, the Switch port of Hamster's ACA "Macross II: Lovers Again" finally shows up at 10:00am PST on the USA region Switch eShop with a MSRP of $14.99 usd. It's a mere 155mb d/l at best. It's about damn time that Macross II showed up in proper form on the Switch gaming platform.
Will have to double dip and get it on the PS4 gaming platform as well -- thanks for handy tip that it's on PS4, BrianC.
With development done by NMK and published by Banpresto themselves in 1993, Macross II: Lovers Again is a solid and fine sequel follow-up to the first "Super Dimensional Fortress Macross" arcade stg released a year earlier in both Japan & the USA (courtesy of Fabtek). The cool simulated holograms of the singing emulators is spot on as shown within the Macross II OVA series with the "M-II: LA "ACA stg port for completeness (it wouldn't be the same without it indeed).
M-II has the obligatory on-line leaderboard support from the get-go -- how cool is that? Scanline filter is available on tap but a smoothing filter is automatically applied if any scanline filter is selected and applied -- you'll have to jack up the overall screen brightness of your Switch if a scanline filter is applied to M-II though. M-II looks "drop-dead gorgeous" on an Oled Switch setup as it should be.
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Be sure to check out Macross II OVA series streaming right now on Disney's Hulu+ -- it's all cool to see the Valkyrie VF-SS2 mecha in action for ol' times sake through "rose colored lenses" nowadays. Back in the day when anime was done entirely "all by hand" with the traditional anime cel format -- truly a "labor of love" back in those days of early 1990s anime lore/culture with the hard-core underground otaku crowd/audience.
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It was US Renditions whom handled the distribution & sales of M-II OVA series in the USA with the franchised American speciality video retailer Suncoast Motion Picture Company (aka F.Y.E. -- "For Your Entertainment" nowadays) selling it on VHS tape medium back in 1992 -- American anime fans were overjoyed that a brand new Macross sequel was released during that particular point in time -- I know I was when I first heard through the grapevine by "word of mouth" that a new Macross sequel was coming stateside.
Of course, US Renditions sold three professionally pre-recorded VHS tapes with two episodes of M-II each (and you had to buy all three VHS video cassettes for a grand total of six episodes altogether just to find out what happens next -- with the infamous "hook, line & sinker" approach/marketing strategy, US Renditions knew exactly what they were doing with the M-II OVA series by breaking into it separate VHS tapes for mass general consumption and still making a tidy profit off of it) -- as such were the days of buying & collecting anime VHS tapes back in the early 1990s. Suncoast Motion Picture Co. was well-known to sell anime on brand new pre-recorded VHS tapes priced at between $29.99 to $39.99 usd each -- quite expensive back in the day as usual in retrospect nowadays.
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Yes, it would've been awesome if Fabtek had secured the rights to sell & distribute arcade pcb jamma conversion kits of "Macross II: Lovers Again" in the USA back in 1993-1994 but that wasn't meant to be in the end. Oh well, it is what it is. American arcade gamers missed out on playing M-II entirely (as they were already well-versed & quite familiar with the Macross II OVA series released a year earlier back in 1992).
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PC Engine Fan X! ^_~
Will have to double dip and get it on the PS4 gaming platform as well -- thanks for handy tip that it's on PS4, BrianC.
With development done by NMK and published by Banpresto themselves in 1993, Macross II: Lovers Again is a solid and fine sequel follow-up to the first "Super Dimensional Fortress Macross" arcade stg released a year earlier in both Japan & the USA (courtesy of Fabtek). The cool simulated holograms of the singing emulators is spot on as shown within the Macross II OVA series with the "M-II: LA "ACA stg port for completeness (it wouldn't be the same without it indeed).
M-II has the obligatory on-line leaderboard support from the get-go -- how cool is that? Scanline filter is available on tap but a smoothing filter is automatically applied if any scanline filter is selected and applied -- you'll have to jack up the overall screen brightness of your Switch if a scanline filter is applied to M-II though. M-II looks "drop-dead gorgeous" on an Oled Switch setup as it should be.
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Be sure to check out Macross II OVA series streaming right now on Disney's Hulu+ -- it's all cool to see the Valkyrie VF-SS2 mecha in action for ol' times sake through "rose colored lenses" nowadays. Back in the day when anime was done entirely "all by hand" with the traditional anime cel format -- truly a "labor of love" back in those days of early 1990s anime lore/culture with the hard-core underground otaku crowd/audience.
----------
It was US Renditions whom handled the distribution & sales of M-II OVA series in the USA with the franchised American speciality video retailer Suncoast Motion Picture Company (aka F.Y.E. -- "For Your Entertainment" nowadays) selling it on VHS tape medium back in 1992 -- American anime fans were overjoyed that a brand new Macross sequel was released during that particular point in time -- I know I was when I first heard through the grapevine by "word of mouth" that a new Macross sequel was coming stateside.
Of course, US Renditions sold three professionally pre-recorded VHS tapes with two episodes of M-II each (and you had to buy all three VHS video cassettes for a grand total of six episodes altogether just to find out what happens next -- with the infamous "hook, line & sinker" approach/marketing strategy, US Renditions knew exactly what they were doing with the M-II OVA series by breaking into it separate VHS tapes for mass general consumption and still making a tidy profit off of it) -- as such were the days of buying & collecting anime VHS tapes back in the early 1990s. Suncoast Motion Picture Co. was well-known to sell anime on brand new pre-recorded VHS tapes priced at between $29.99 to $39.99 usd each -- quite expensive back in the day as usual in retrospect nowadays.
----------
Yes, it would've been awesome if Fabtek had secured the rights to sell & distribute arcade pcb jamma conversion kits of "Macross II: Lovers Again" in the USA back in 1993-1994 but that wasn't meant to be in the end. Oh well, it is what it is. American arcade gamers missed out on playing M-II entirely (as they were already well-versed & quite familiar with the Macross II OVA series released a year earlier back in 1992).
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PC Engine Fan X! ^_~