Galaga 88. I sold one to someone on these forums and they sold off their whole library except that one PCB. Then when I got back to the UK from the US I tried to look high and low for one, eventually found in Belguim.
I would imagine the PCB's that are the rarest are the ones we don't talk about much.
This industry has become 2 dimensional as it transcended into a 3D world.
neorichieb1971 wrote:Galaga 88. I sold one to someone on these forums and they sold off their whole library except that one PCB. Then when I got back to the UK from the US I tried to look high and low for one, eventually found in Belguim.
I would imagine the PCB's that are the rarest are the ones we don't talk about much.
hmm, then I have a new strategy...
1) Find extremely rare game that nobody plays
2) Get moderately decent at it
3) Take high score
A Japanese XEXEX with some art, my pride and joy. Not exactly rare by most standards, however the fragility of the prototype Konami GX board means they are prone to disintegrating - I've had one World version and one Japanese version die on me already. The third is cocooned in bubblewrap and stored in its own box.
I've only got about 7-8 boards right now, so I'm guessing the rarest one I have (or at least the most valuable) is either Dodonpachi or Battle Bakraid.
bcass wrote:Is this game actually any good? Any chance of seeing some footage of the gameplay?
There is a video of the demo/tutorial mode on youtube. I'm holding out my review of this game until I can at least get past level 3 on one credit. There are some unavoidable missile attacks that I must be dodging wrong. In short the game is a lot like Rez, and depends heavily on the double dash roll tactic that can only be accomplished if the joysticks are calibrated properly. The graphics, music and effects are great, as expected for a Hikaru (Naomi+) game.
At some point I hope to get a good VGA capture system, and will take some high end videos to show the gameplay.
I've seen and played the uber-rare USA region Tenkomori Variety Shooting cabinet with official U.S. marquee signage at the California Extreme show a few times in the past years that it's made it's appearance...so that's old news for me. ^_~
What you don't see very often is a Data East produced Darwin 4078 PCB with original arcade paperworks and instruction manual. That, I do have. It does command a hefty price in some Japanese PCB shops. ^_~
PC Engine Fan X! ^_~
Last edited by PC Engine Fan X! on Sat Sep 20, 2008 1:28 pm, edited 1 time in total.