TBH, I got bored of Todd pretty quickly. Looks great though.
TBH, I got bored of Todd pretty quickly. Looks great though.
Some of the older games did lay ground for amazing sequels- Tempest 2000, Tetris TGM series, Majestic 12/Space Invaders 4, Galaga '88, Pac-Mania, and the Namco Classics Arrangement modes (Pac-Man Arrangement any day) to name a few.
SMS is fine, but many of its arcade releases have been re-ported more faithfully onto newer systems. Any 8-bit that I play is usually an original title. That said, there are some good originals on SMS that I've played, such as Kenseiden and Alex Kidd (a true rival to the first SMB).
As for SNK, I think they should let the KOF series ride with XIV for a while, and revisit Ikari once. All they need for that is to make the gameplay like the overhead shooter action of the first two, and keep away from the third's beat-em-up action.
The classic Atari arcade games are as good as anything. The Lynx is the shit too, and a culmination of a lot of that school of thought. The problem is most people know those games by their shitty VCS ports.
I've never played Slime World, and it doesn't seem appealing. Is it really worthwhile without the multiplayer angle, because that's not likely to happen?
Don't trip. Alex Kidd is a great game, but no.
To boldly go where lots of men have gone before...
At that time, the arcade had the definite advantage. It would've taken the NES to get some of Atari's earlier arcade titles done justice on a console. Atari had a shot at the Nintendo Famicom before it became the NES, but that deal went straight to Hell. After reading this, it's hard to not wonder what may have been if things were different. The deal may have been more beneficial to Nintendo than Atari, but chances are it would've beat going on their own with the 7800. Nintendo would've got the Famicom out sooner (Christmas '83). Some dispute with Nintendo about Coleco showing Donkey Kong on the Adam computer caused a delay, which allowed an insider trading scandal involving CEO Ray Kassar to kill it.
What if it did happen? That would've meant using Atari as a salesforce and even a developer. For Atari, this would have meant a system powerful enough to do their arcade titles justice or with minor compromises. Liberator might have been good on NES, if the rotating planet effect could be done (got to be some way, right?).
Tengen Tetris, anyone... and led to Klax.
Get you an analog nt mini.
Excellent summary of the Lynx philosophy. The Lynx was the best place to find Atari arcade ports from the mid-80s to early 90s. Atari was right up there with Sega in terms of arcade prowess during that period, and this was the place to play those games at home.
I would say Slime World is more fun than most "Metroidvania" clones from indie devs that release nowadays. It's got 6 missions with varied goals that are selectable from the start, all of which are doable single player.
The spirit of liberty is the spirit which is not too sure it is always right. -Learned Hand
"Jesus christ you are still THE WORST." -FirstBlood
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