So I remember this game at the arcade I think back in the day but I was wondering if it ever came to a home console version as I don't have any way of playing PCB's. I need to look into a supergun as they are new to me
Well I have a way of playing for free till I can afford them and yep they are rather pricey. Not many sell for under $100 Now I just hope I can find a new Marty as I would kill to have a working one again I wish I lived in Japan
Sega_Fanboy wrote:Well I have a way of playing for free till I can afford them and yep they are rather pricey. Not many sell for under $100 Now I just hope I can find a new Marty as I would kill to have a working one again I wish I lived in Japan
It truly is a gamer's paradise to stroll in Japan checking out the various Japanese game shops. Just be sure to bring lots of money...as you're gonna need it to buy some of those cool and rare and not to mention expensive games. Arcade PCB shops are cool too. ^_~
MAME handles it fine if you're willing to go that route.
On a side note, there's an ultracade machine on campus here that has Truxton 2 as one of the few shmups. I can't say I'm a huge fan but it's not a bad game I guess.
"I think Ikaruga is pretty tough. It is like a modern version of Galaga that some Japanese company made."
Ed Oscuro wrote:just fyi it probably has terrible screen options, like all the other toaplan ports
i.e. no tate, just fake-tate (if you're lucky) or a scrolling screen, or even weird and nonsensical screen options (as in Flying Shark)
I thought Daisenpu turned out great on the on the Megadrive. The screen options weren't perfect, but I've never had any cheap deaths as a result.
It's quite a shame that Truxton 2 and Flying Shark never got more home ports; as good as Fire Shark turned out on the Genesis, I think Flying Shark would've turned great out well.
And then there's Slap Fight-I never did get one of those controllers that NSCX had where the game was built-in.
"Farewell to false pretension
Farewell to hollow words
Farewell to fake affection
Farewell, tomorrow burns"
DEL wrote:I once saw the Marty cart of this in a shop. Big price tag attached.
No surprise there. I had paid $170 for it once, but wouldn't do it now.
Some of the enemies in Marty T2 will fire on you before you can see them, since not all 320 rows of the play area are onscreen (it's cut off a bit at the top).
There's a bit of slowdown, and it lacks parallax or Tate.
Ed Oscuro wrote:just fyi it probably has terrible screen options, like all the other toaplan ports :(
i.e. no tate, just fake-tate (if you're lucky) or a scrolling screen, or even weird and nonsensical screen options (as in Flying Shark)
We're talking about the FM Towns, here.
And yeah there are some decent Toaplan ports on the Genny, although I think the TG-16 / PC-Engine usually does better (Truxton, Twin Cobra both do much better there) than most all the Genny ports (Slap Fight and Daisenpu I grant are good to great ports).
DEL wrote:I once saw the Marty cart of this in a shop.
Marty game cases are kinda big, but they don't come with their own wheels - the game is just a CD-ROM. Just throwing that out there before somebody gets confused.
kengou wrote:MAME handles it fine if you're willing to go that route.
On a side note, there's an ultracade machine on campus here that has Truxton 2 as one of the few shmups. I can't say I'm a huge fan but it's not a bad game I guess.