J is Justice
Wade Wilson
Will now be grateful.
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Post by J is Justice on Nov 23, 2009 21:17:27 GMT -5
Ristar
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Deleted
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Post by Deleted on Nov 23, 2009 21:42:54 GMT -5
Blaster Master 2
Never played that version of Pitfall, and I will always stand by my belief that Ristar deserves the "forgotten" status everyone thinks it has but it really doesn't. There are some authentically difficult parts, but for every one of those there are about 3 "chuck the controller across the room, pick up the remains and chuck them into the wall again" bulls*** parts, and thats only the beginning of my issues with it. If it wasn't a Sonic Team game, NOBODY cares for Ristar and nobody would consider it some forgotten classic.
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Post by Sponsored by Groose Wipes on Nov 23, 2009 22:41:28 GMT -5
I'd have to go with Blaster Master 2. Ristar is overratted. (Gonna piss off a lot of people with this post)
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Post by forgottensinpwf on Nov 23, 2009 23:28:44 GMT -5
Ristar
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Allie Kitsune
Crow T. Robot
Always Feelin' Foxy.
HaHa U FaLL 4 LaVa TriK
Posts: 46,164
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Post by Allie Kitsune on Nov 24, 2009 0:33:39 GMT -5
Ristar.
Blaster Master 2 tends to get by just on how much people loved the NES game.
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MrBRulzOK
Wade Wilson
Mr No-Pants Heathen
Something Witty Here.
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Post by MrBRulzOK on Nov 24, 2009 1:18:19 GMT -5
A valiant effort by Blaster Master 2, but in the end Ristar soars on to the next round! And Pitfall... yeah. Next match... Another random assortment of games! Indiana Jones and the last Crusade (1992) Developed by Tiertex. Published by U.S. Gold/Tec Toy. In 1989, Lucasfilm Games released both a graphical adventure game and an action game of the same name, based on the film. There are also two completely different games for the NES called Indiana Jones and the Last Crusade, one released by Taito, and another by Ubi Soft, with no subtitle to differentiate the two versions. vs Rocket Knight Adventures (1993) Developed and published by Konami. A Super NES version of Rocket Knight Adventures was planned, but was never released. The game later had a sequel, named Sparkster: Rocket Knight Adventures 2, for the Mega Drive and a spin-off for the SNES, named Sparkster. While both games were produced at roughly the same time, and shared the same name, and same box art, they were totally individual games, as with other Konami 16-bit releases with the same name. However the Mega Drive/Genesis version is actually referred in Japan with the subtitle Rocket Knight Adventures 2, which also was used overseas in the game introduction. Aside from characters, they did not relate to each other. However, the Mega Drive/Genesis version is the true sequel to Rocket Knight Adventures, due to the stated continuity from the events of the original game on the same console, whereas the Super NES version is more of a spin-off of the same game. Like their predecessor, neither of both games were mainstream successes. vs Samurai Showdown (1994) Developed by Saurus. Published by Takara. All the 16-bit Sega versions of the game (including the Sega CD version) omitted Earthquake. Both versions lack the camera zoom, and as a result the camera is zoomed-in, which gives better detail to the characters, but the fighting area is smaller. Of note is the Sega CD version, which contained a bug which caused the game to crash when the final boss was reached. Publisher JVC offered to replace glitched discs with copies of Fatal Fury Special (which they also published for the system). No "fixed" version was released.
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Post by Brandon Walsh is Insane. on Nov 24, 2009 1:20:47 GMT -5
Rocket Knight Adventures
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Allie Kitsune
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Always Feelin' Foxy.
HaHa U FaLL 4 LaVa TriK
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Post by Allie Kitsune on Nov 24, 2009 1:35:14 GMT -5
I'll go with Rocket Knight here.
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Post by YellowJacketY2J on Nov 24, 2009 8:06:09 GMT -5
Rocket Knight Adventures
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Post by Romeo Hotel on Nov 24, 2009 13:08:26 GMT -5
Samurai Showdown
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Post by Deleted on Nov 24, 2009 13:12:15 GMT -5
It's pointless but give another to the Rocket Knight. I'd have to go with Blaster Master 2. Ristar is overratted. (Gonna piss off a lot of people with this post) We tried bro. (for the record, I had no clue he was gonna vote in this, I will stake my account on it)
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Post by Mr PONYMANIA Mr Jenzie on Nov 24, 2009 18:10:27 GMT -5
my picks for all it's worth
fatal fury 2 sonic 2 chuck rock smash tv world of illusion rolling thunder 2 sunset riders crueball road rash streets of rage rister rocket knight adventures
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MrBRulzOK
Wade Wilson
Mr No-Pants Heathen
Something Witty Here.
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Post by MrBRulzOK on Nov 24, 2009 18:34:03 GMT -5
Rocket Knight Adventures soars through to the next round! Next match... MORE GAMES! Mega Lo Mania/Tyrants: Fight Through Time (1992) Developed by Sensible Software. Published by Virgin Interactive. The object of the game is to conquer 28 islands divided into sectors, with three islands per Epoch and one for the final Epoch. The player must take on the role of one of four Gods: Scarlet (Red), Oberon (Yellow), Caesar (Green) or Madcap (Blue). As their God, the player must lead his or her people by instructing them to do a number of different tasks such as create buildings, design weapons, mine for elements or form an army. The ultimate aim is to defeat all the other Gods by destroying their towers and their people. vs Shining Force (1993) Developed by Sonic/Climax. Published by Sega. While the game is the first in chronological order in the Shining series, it is the second game released in the series, of which the first game released is Shining in the Darkness. Though Shining Force retained many elements from its predecessor, such as the distinctive menu system, the gameplay is drastically different. Shining in the Darkness is a dungeon crawler in first-person perspective, while Shining Force is a strategy RPG. The Shining series flips between many gameplay styles: returning to first person dungeon crawler for Shining the Holy Ark; adopting Legend of Zelda mechanics for Shining Wisdom; and the Shining Soul games being inspired by Diablo, for instance. vs X-Men (1993) Developed by Western Technologies. Published by Sega/Tec Toy. At the time, this game is one of few games which break the 4th wall. Once Mojo is defeated, the player must "reset the computer" for the Danger Room to stop the virus being emitted on Mojo's level. However, there are no switches for doing so. Resetting the computer is meant to be literal, in that the player has to lightly press the reset button on the Sega Mega Drive/Genesis console before the time ran out. If executed well, the game will display digits as if a computer has been reset. Although unique, this trick was widely panned by both video game magazine critics and consumers. Holding down the reset button too long would simply reset the system as one would normally expect. This also makes the game impossible to complete when playing on the Sega Nomad without using a level select cheat, as the portable Sega Mega Drive/Genesis has no reset button.
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Allie Kitsune
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Always Feelin' Foxy.
HaHa U FaLL 4 LaVa TriK
Posts: 46,164
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Post by Allie Kitsune on Nov 24, 2009 18:50:19 GMT -5
Shining Force. I don't see it having a chance to beat X-Men, but it's one of my top 3 favorite games on the system (and one of the other two isn't going to make this tournament, I'd bet)
So Very Much Shining Force.
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J is Justice
Wade Wilson
Will now be grateful.
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Post by J is Justice on Nov 24, 2009 18:53:43 GMT -5
Shining Force
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Post by forgottensinpwf on Nov 24, 2009 20:00:41 GMT -5
Never played Shining Force, but i personally hate the 1st X-Men game ,so Shining Force gets my vote.
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dabossftw
Unicron
wants Yappapi in the proper position.
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Post by dabossftw on Nov 24, 2009 20:09:05 GMT -5
X-Men
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MrBRulzOK
Wade Wilson
Mr No-Pants Heathen
Something Witty Here.
Posts: 26,719
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Post by MrBRulzOK on Nov 24, 2009 20:17:47 GMT -5
Shining Force delivers a critical hit and gains 88 experience points! Also a trip to the next round. Next match... Should be something. Chuck Rock II: Son of Chuck (1993) Developed by Core Design. Published by Virgin Games/Core Design/Tec Toy/Samsung The gameplay in this sequel is similar to the first game, but with some minor differences since you are playing as Junior, rather than Chuck. This is a side-scrolling platform game with occasional rock-moving puzzles thrown in. Unlike Chuck, Junior carries a club that gives his attacks further reach. vs Sonic the Hedgehog 3 (1994) Developed by Sonic Team/Sega Technical Institute. Published by Sega Sonic 3 and Sonic & Knuckles were originally planned as one single-cartridge game. However, as time constraints and the manufacturing costs of a 34 megabit cartridge with NVRAM would have been prohibitively expensive, the decision was taken to split the game in half, giving Yuji Naka and the other developers more time to finish the second part, and splitting the high cost between two cartridges. Because of the split development, a lot of extra data from Sonic & Knuckles is still present on the Sonic 3 cartridge. Several pieces of music and three unplayable levels from Sonic & Knuckles are listed on the level select and sound test screen, including Mushroom Valley, an early name for Mushroom Hill Zone. In addition, by utilizing a glitch in Hydrocity Zone, the Sonic & Knuckles mini-boss theme can be heard in Sonic 3. An unusual quirk is that, as game manuals have a longer lead time than game cartridges, the Sonic 3 manual included some Badniks that only appear in Sonic and Knuckles zones. vs Batman (1990) Developed by Sunsoft. Published by Sunsoft/Sega. Unlike the NES, this version stays closer to the plot of the film, and features the Batmobile and Batwing in the form of horizontal shooting levels. While the NES version allows three unique weapons and unlimited continues, the Genesis version only has the Batarang as a special weapon with limited continues. The grappling hook is an additional item. The game also deviates from the film plot because in the film, Batman attempts to save Napier from falling into the chemicals, but fails. However in the game, Batman actually knocks Napier into the vat. This game has little or no cutscenes, instead the player advances to the next destination, after defeating a boss character.
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Post by forgottensinpwf on Nov 24, 2009 20:20:24 GMT -5
Sonic 3
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J is Justice
Wade Wilson
Will now be grateful.
Hi.
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Post by J is Justice on Nov 24, 2009 20:20:56 GMT -5
Sonic the Hedgehog 3
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