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Post by Seth Drakin of Monster Crap on Sept 11, 2007 16:02:24 GMT -5
![](http://www.consoleclassix.com/info_img/Top_Gun_2_The_Second_Mission_NES_ScreenShot2.jpg) 107. Top Gun 2: The Second Mission Piloting an F-14 Tomcat fighter, the player, as Top Gun's main character Maverick, has to complete four missions: Mission 1 - Training for the next mission. Mission 2 - Destroy an enemy aircraft carrier. Mission 3 - Destroy an enemy base. Mission 4 - Destroy an enemy Space Shuttle. All four missions require the player to land on an aircraft carrier upon completion. Missions 2, 3 and 4 require the player to refuel in the middle of the mission. Mission 4 is the most surreal, involving combat with land, sea, air, and space targets. There are three missile types available to the player: *Hound (quantity: 40); *Wolf (quantity: 20); *Tiger (quantity: 10). The Hound is the best missile for training, since there are no targets on Mission 1 strong enough to withstand it, but it is a weak choice for the other missions.
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Post by Seth Drakin of Monster Crap on Sept 11, 2007 16:03:56 GMT -5
![](http://www.consoleclassix.com/info_img/Time_Lord_NES_ScreenShot2.jpg) 106. Time Lord In the year 2999, Earth is under siege by aliens from the fictional planet Drakkon. Using time travel technology, they have sent armies to four periods in human history, with the intention of altering history to make humankind easier to conquer in the present. The player assumes control of the "Time Lord", who has until January 1st, 3000 A.D. to vanquish the enemy in the past, or else he will self-destruct along with the time machine. The player begins in the MB Time Travel Research Center, then progresses through four levels based on periods in human history (Medieval England 1250 A.D., Western U.S.A. 1860 A.D., Caribbean 1650 A.D., and France 1943 A.D.). After the Drakkon forces have been eliminated, the player returns to the present to do battle with the Drakkon King. The game features isometric graphics to simulate 3D terrain. The Time Lord can jump, punch, and use period weapons such as swords and guns. In order to progress from level to level, the player must acquire five golden orbs with which to power the time machine. In the era levels, four of the five orbs are scattered throughout each level, with the fifth being relinquished after defeating a Drakkon Lord (boss). The aforementioned year 3000 deadline is in effect in game. One day in present time transpires in four seconds, meaning the player has 24 minutes and 34 seconds of gameplay time to complete the game or the game is lost.
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Post by piehead on Sept 11, 2007 16:07:21 GMT -5
Haha! I was the one who voted for Back to the Future! Shame on you lol Yeah I voted for Timelord, don't know why but I loved it when I was younger!
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Post by Seth Drakin of Monster Crap on Sept 11, 2007 16:12:31 GMT -5
125. Master Blaster 124. Skate or Die! 123. The Bugs Bunny Crazy Castle 122. Ice Climber 121. Gradius 120. Journey To Silius 119. WCW: World Championship Wrestling 118. Urban Champion 117. Parosol Stars 116. Kung Fu 115. Monster In My Pocket 114. Smash TV 113. Tecmo Baseball 112. Abadox 111. Kid Icarus 110: Pirates! 109. Metal Gear 108. Donkey Kong 107. Top Gun 2: The Second Mission 106. Time Lord
The clues to the next five games are:
* Did Great Without The MLB Liscense
* Featured In The Jean Claude Van Damme Movie, Bloodsport
* Stop Zeed From Kidnapping Children
* Strong Bads & Ricky Fighters
* The Hero Works Essentially Alone Unlike The Movie And Arcade Versions
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Post by piehead on Sept 11, 2007 16:15:20 GMT -5
* Strong Bads & Ricky Fighters Bad Dudes vs Drajonninja
Not sure of the others
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Post by Seth Drakin of Monster Crap on Sept 11, 2007 16:20:10 GMT -5
* Strong Bads & Ricky Fighters Bad Dudes vs Drajonninja Not sure of the others Actually, you would be incorrect
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Post by piehead on Sept 11, 2007 16:34:59 GMT -5
Sorry meant to say that it was a guess! I'm stumped then
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Post by Seth Drakin of Monster Crap on Sept 11, 2007 17:02:26 GMT -5
![](http://www.consoleclassix.com/info_img/Shinobi_NES_ScreenShot4.jpg) 105. Shinobi Shinobi is about a ninja named Joe Musashi who has to stop a criminal organization called "Zeed" who are kidnapping the children of the Oboro clan. Through five missions of increasing difficulty, Musashi must make his way to Zeed's headquarters and free all the hostages before confronting their leader, the Masked Ninja. The five missions in the game are each three or four stages long. Anywhere from 2-9 hostages are being held in each stage; Joe must rescue all of them before he is allowed to finish the stage. The last stage in each mission has no hostages, but instead features a powerful boss character whom Joe must defeat. After completing each of the first four missions the player is taken to a bonus stage, where he can earn an extra life if he is able to kill all of the ninjas jumping towards him. Completing the fifth mission ends the game. Also, once the fifth mission begins, continues are no longer allowed; the player has to finish the game with however many lives he has left at that point. Joe's standard weapons are an unlimited supply of throwing stars, along with punches and kicks when attacking at close range. One hostage per stage gives him a power-up. When powered-up, his throwing stars are replaced by a gun that fires large, explosive bullets, and his close-range attack becomes a katana slash. Joe can also perform "ninja magic," which may be used only once per stage and kills (or damages, in the case of bosses) all enemies on the screen. At the end of each stage, the player receives score bonuses based on performance. Completing the stage without using ninja magic earns the player a 5,000 point bonus (except during mission five), and completing the stage without using any throwing stars or bullets (just punches, kicks, sword slashes, and/or ninja magic) earns the player a 20,000 point bonus. The player has three minutes to complete each stage; remaining time at the end of the stage is also converted to bonus points and added to the player's score. Expert Shinobi players often challenged themselves to see how many stages they could pass with both the "no stars" and "no ninja magic" bonuses. It is possible to beat the game on one quarter in this way with a final score of over 700,000 points; the final score for someone who completes the game on one quarter without trying for those bonuses would be in the neighborhood of 250,000 points. It is also possible for the player to manipulate the points received for rescuing each hostage based on his/her current score. Since most enemies appear in the same place on each level, it is possible to master the game by memorizing their locations and devising patterns to defeat them.
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Post by Seth Drakin of Monster Crap on Sept 11, 2007 17:04:06 GMT -5
![](http://content.answers.com/main/content/wp/en/7/7d/Tag_Team_Wrestling.jpg) 104. Tag Team Wrestling The Famicom/NES version was developed by Sas Sakata, a company who also developed the Famicom/NES version of Karnov . The name of the game in Japan is The Big Pro Wrestling! for the original arcade version and Tag Team Pro Wrestling for the Famicom version. In North America, it is Tag Team Wrestling for both the arcade and NES versions. The game was also ported Commodore 64 and IBM PC computers before it even made it to the Famicom, precisely in 1984. In the NES version, two professional wrestling tag-teams, the Strong Bads and the Ricky Fighters, battle against each other in tag-team action, or a single player competes in a series of tournaments to win ever larger trophies. The Strong Bads provided the basis for the character Strong Bad on the popular Homestar Runner website, which abounds with obscure 1980s popular culture references. As an 8-bit game, Tag Team Wrestling has a limited number of wrestling moves and characters. Moves and counters are performed through the use of a real-time, menu-based action-reaction fighting module. After engaging in a grapple, players quickly scroll through a menu and choose a technique to perform. Each of the four characters has a unique move that can only be used against one other "rival" wrestler.
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Post by Seth Drakin of Monster Crap on Sept 11, 2007 17:06:02 GMT -5
![](http://content.answers.com/main/content/wp/en/thumb/b/bb/225px-RBIBaseballNES.png) 103. RBI Baseball The roots for RBI Baseball begin with Tengen's controlling company, Namco. In December 1986, Namco released Pro Yakyuu Family Stadium (a.k.a. Family Stadium) for the Nintendo Famicom, the Japanese version of the Nintendo Entertainment System. Family Stadium was a success and spawned numerous sequels across a variety of platforms in Japan. In 1987, Atari Games, the American arcade division and Tengen's parent company, ports Family Stadium to the Nintendo Vs. Series and releases Vs. RBI Baseball. The game was also a success and the programmer for Vs. RBI Baseball, Peter Lipson, then started on a console version for the NES. Although it also featured excellent gameplay, the MLBPA license is what set RBI Baseball apart from the rest of the baseball games in the late 1980s. Though RBI did not have an MLB license (giving them the right to use team nicknames or logos), they still gave you the selection of 8 MLB teams listed by city name - Boston, California, Detroit, Houston, Minnesota, New York, St. Louis, and San Francisco. There were also two All-Star teams, American League and National League, featuring players from teams other than the eight represented in the game. The eight teams were chosen because they were the playoff teams from the 1986 (Boston, California, Houston, New York) and 1987 (Detroit, Minnesota, St. Louis, San Francisco) MLB seasons. The All-Star teams featured such established veterans as George Brett, Dale Murphy and Andre Dawson, none of whom appeared on any of the other teams in the game, as well as up-and-coming players like Mark McGwire, Andres Galarraga and José Canseco. Each player has different capabilities in the game; hitters vary in ability to make solid contact, to hit the ball with power, and their base running speed. Vince Coleman is the fastest player in the game; it is very difficult to catch him stealing second base. Pitchers vary in pitching speed, and the amount by which you can steer the ball left and right during its flight. Pitchers also have varying stamina; as a pitcher gets tired, the ball slows down and is harder to steer. There is no evidence that fielding abilities correspond to individual players. The abilities of each player do not necessary correspond with the statistics shown on the screen when the player comes to bat or takes the mound. These statistics are generally accurate, with many exceptions (see below). They do not change during the course of the game or sequence of games. A rudimentary box score is displayed during and after the game showing composite statistics for each team. A hit batter is credited with a walk, and anyone reaching on an error gets credited for a hit even as the other team is charged with an error. Conversely, a batter thrown out while trying for extra bases is not credited with a hit. As of August 22, 2007, Roger Clemens is the only player from RBI Baseball who is still an active player in MLB. Three players from the game - Donnie Moore, Kirby Puckett, and José Uribe - have died. The rosters for the 8 teams are fairly accurate if simplified representations of the playoff rosters from their respective years. Each team has 8 starting batters, four bench players, two starting pitchers and two relievers. You can start any pitcher you like, though the relievers have very low stamina. But if you play consecutive games without resetting the system, any starting pitcher used in the previous game will be unavailable. For pinch hitters, you have to wait until the game starts before subbing players. Pinch hitters can substitute for any position player regardless of their actual skills. In Vs. RBI Baseball, the teams are made up of legends from 10 different franchises. These players were statistically represented with their best seasons. A notable exception was that of McGwire, who was included on the Oakland team, and was statistically represented by his potential numbers. In a remarkable display of foresight, he was projected to hit 62 home runs in his best season. In 1998, he set the major league record for home runs in a season with 70; Barry Bonds would break this record with 73 in 2001. The actual gameplay is extremely difficult due to the near perfection of the AI's ability
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Post by Seth Drakin of Monster Crap on Sept 11, 2007 17:08:39 GMT -5
![](http://www.consoleclassix.com/info_img/Willow_NES_ScreenShot1.jpg) 102. Willow In the game you play as Willow. Unlike the film and arcade game, this version of Willow works essentially alone, meeting the other characters only briefly. In the tradition of The Legend of Zelda, Willow wields a sword and shield and many supplimentary items along with a wide variety of magic spells. As the game progresses and Willow defeats enemies, he gains experience points and levels as in a RPG.
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Post by Seth Drakin of Monster Crap on Sept 11, 2007 17:10:13 GMT -5
![](http://www.consoleclassix.com/info_img/Karate_Champ_NES_ScreenShot2.jpg) 101. Karate Champ In this game, the player assumes the role of a Karate competitor and fights against another player or the computer. Using two joysticks, players can execute a number of moves. Gameplay consists of a two dimensional fight between Karate characters wearing white and red gi, followed by various bonus rounds for the successful player. This pattern repeats itself in the next, more challenging round set against a new background. Unlike most later fighter-type games, there are no health bar or hit points. A hit successfully landed ends the round and earnes the player or his opponent either one point or half point (along with a numeric score for the top ten but this has no effect on winning a match per se). The first to two points is the winner. The game also featured some early speech synthesis, in which the judge would call out such phrases as "Fight!" or "Winner!"
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Post by Seth Drakin of Monster Crap on Sept 11, 2007 17:21:04 GMT -5
125. Master Blaster 124. Skate or Die! 123. The Bugs Bunny Crazy Castle 122. Ice Climber 121. Gradius 120. Journey To Silius 119. WCW: World Championship Wrestling 118. Urban Champion 117. Parosol Stars 116. Kung Fu 115. Monster In My Pocket 114. Smash TV 113. Tecmo Baseball 112. Abadox 111. Kid Icarus 110: Pirates! 109. Metal Gear 108. Donkey Kong 107. Top Gun 2: The Second Mission 106. Time Lord 105. Shinobi 104. Tag Team Wrestling 103. RBI Baseball 102. Willow 101. Karate Champ
Tomarrow....we find out who made the Top 100
The clues to the next five games are:
* Cyborg Version Of Adolf Hitler
* Data East's Mascot
* Jellybeans
* Questionable Scene Which Looks Like Someone Is Getting A Blow Job
* Travel Through Midway, Attu, Rabaul, Leyte, Saipan, Iwo Jima and Okinawa
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Post by The Portable Stove on Sept 11, 2007 17:31:28 GMT -5
* Cyborg Version Of Adolf Hitler * Data East's Mascot * Jellybeans * Questionable Scene Which Looks Like Someone Is Getting A Blow Job In order, Bionic Commando, Joe and Mac, A Boy and his Blob, and Ring King.
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Post by Seth Drakin of Monster Crap on Sept 11, 2007 17:32:53 GMT -5
* Cyborg Version Of Adolf Hitler * Data East's Mascot * Jellybeans * Questionable Scene Which Looks Like Someone Is Getting A Blow Job In order, Bionic Commando, Joe and Mac, A Boy and his Blob, and Ring King. Two Are Wrong, Two Are Right
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Post by The Portable Stove on Sept 11, 2007 17:36:25 GMT -5
That's what I get for trying to do almost all of them at once. ![:P](//storage.proboards.com/forum/images/smiley/tongue.png)
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Post by Harmonica on Sept 11, 2007 17:55:29 GMT -5
Data East Mascot
Karnov
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Post by Z-A Sandbaggin' Son of a b!%@h on Sept 11, 2007 18:51:56 GMT -5
I'm so pissed I forgot about Monster Party.. dammit. And so far only 1 of my games has made the cut.... Kung Fu!
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kass
AC Slater
Super Jobber
Posts: 107
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Post by kass on Sept 11, 2007 19:00:07 GMT -5
Top Gun 2? ![???](//storage.proboards.com/forum/images/smiley/huh.png) C'mon man.
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kass
AC Slater
Super Jobber
Posts: 107
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Post by kass on Sept 11, 2007 19:00:56 GMT -5
Shinobi for NES was the worst version of said game, or is this a list of worst games?
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