http://www.e-xtreme.co.jp/aniki/
mark
Damn Tim, you know there are quite a few Americans out there who still lives in tents due to this shitty economy, and you're dropping loads on a single game which only last 20 min. Do you think it's fair? How much did you spend this time?
painful doesn't describe the debauchery that port was. ruining the control scheme and removing the opening entirely, not to mention ruined graphics.sven666 wrote:actually this was a very painfull experienceGrant Windsor wrote:
While it was nice to get enhanced ports of Assault Suits Valken

'JoshF wrote:Nippon Computer Systems still exists, but Masaiya does not. They were dissolved after the Wonder Swan version of Chou Aniki IIRC, and moved to X-Nauts.
Every NCS game, no matter the system, has the Masaya (correct spelling) logo on it...same company. Masaya was the games division of NCS, much like NEC Avenue (and, later, NEC Interchannel) was the games division of NEC. As far as Assault Suits Valken goes, I own the SNES version as well...but I have no problems with the PS2 rev. To each his or her own, I guess. I've been bashed in the past for liking games like Adventure of Little Ralph and Gunners Heaven (both PS1), so maybe the gloss of 2D clouds my vision at times.Fighter17 wrote:Then why any NCS game on the MD has the Masaiya logo on it?
I should've went by the katakana and called it Mesaiya. That must be the worst logo in history. I've heard it called Misaya, Misaiya, Masaya, Masiya, and Masaiya based on the logo, and it's hard to say any of them are incorrect.Masaya (correct spelling) logo on
Masaya's music was awesome. and I would actually like to know about where their titles have gone now.zinger wrote:I don't know, but I could find out if you want to. I'm in contact with the people who owns the rights for all of Masaya's game music.Fighter17 wrote:Know their history?zinger wrote: Out of the business.
Who owns the rights to their titles now?
