Hercules Action Game - PS1
Hercules (also known as Hercules Action Game and as Disney's Action Game Featuring Hercules[3] and Disney's Action Game Featuring Disney's Hercules[4] in Europe) is a 1997 platform game based on the 1997 film of the same name. Versions were released for the PlayStation, Microsoft Windows, and Game Boy on July 3, 1997, in North America and on November 14, 1997, in Europe. In 2011, the PlayStation version was made available on the PlayStation Store.
Plot
The game follows the same storyline from the animated film. Hercules, son of Zeus, is stripped of his godhood and must prove that he is a true hero in order to regain his immortality, and join Zeus and the other gods on Mount Olympus. To do that, Hercules must pass several tasks and defeat many villains, and at the end, face Hades, ruler of the dead, who is also responsible for Hercules' losing of his immortality.
153
views
2
comments
Golden Axe - Sega Genesis
Golden Ax IIZゴールデンアックスZGooruden Akkusu ({{{2}}}?) is a side-scrolling beat'em up video game released in 1989 by Sega for the System 16-B arcade.[1] It is the first game in the Golden Ax series.
Makoto Uchida was the game's lead designer, and was also responsible for creating Altered Beast. The game was ported to the Mega Drive and Master System consoles, among many other systems.
Plot
The game takes place in the fictional land named Yuria. a high fantasy world in the style of Conan the Barbarian.
An evil entity known as Death Adder has captured the king and his daughter, keeping them both captive inside his castle. Death Adder also finds the Golden Axe, which is Yuria's symbol, and with it, he threatens to destroy both the ax and the royal family unless Yuria's people accept him as their ruler.
So, three warriors set out on a mission to save Yuria and avenge their losses at the hands of Death Adder. The first is Gilius Thunderhead, from the Wolud mines, who had his twin brother murdered by Death Adder's soldiers. The second is the barbarian Ax Battler, who seeks revenge for the murder of his mother. And last but not least, we have Tyris Flare, who had her parents murdered by Death Adder himself.
The warriors rescued the inhabitants of the then-plundered Turtle Village, named after the shell of a giant turtle. This turtle takes the heroes across the sea and then flies to Death Adder's castle on the back of a giant eagle. Once at the castle, the heroes defeat Death Adder, who was taking over the Golden Ax, and save Yuria.
In the PC and Mega Drive versions, the heroes fight Death Adder's mentor, the Death Bringer, as the true final boss. After the battle, they receive the Golden Ax and are blessed with immortality.
124
views
1
comment
Xena: Warrior Princess - PS1
Xena: Warrior Princess is a hack and slash video game developed by Universal Studios Digital Arts and co-published by Electronic Arts and Universal Interactive Studios for the PlayStation in 1999. A Game Boy Color version was developed and published by Titus Interactive in 2001. Each version is based on the television series of the same name, which aired from 1995 to 2001.
134
views
Super Mario Bros 3
Super Mario Bros. 3 (スーパーマリオブラザーズ3 Sūpā Mario Burazāzu Surī?) is a platform video game in the Super Mario series, developed by Nintendo Entertainment Analysis & Development and published by Nintendo for the Nintendo Entertainment System (NES) console. It was released in Japan on October 23, 1988, in North America on February 12, 1990 and in Europe on August 29, 1991, and follows the adventures of plumbers Mario and Luigi who seek to rescue Princess Mushroom and the rulers of the seven kingdoms of the antagonist Bowser.
As in previous games in the series, the player controls Mario or Luigi and defeats enemies by stomping them or using items that grant magical powers. Characters also have new abilities, including flying and sliding down slopes. Super Mario Bros. 3 features many elements that would later become staples of the Mario series, such as Bowser's children (the Koopalings) and an overworld to transition between stages.
Super Mario Bros. 3 is critically acclaimed as one of the best games of all time. It is the third best-selling NES game, with more than 17 million units sold worldwide. It also inspired a cartoon series called The Adventures of Super Mario Bros. 3. A recreation was released for the Super NES as part of the Super Mario All-Stars compilation in 1993 and for the Game Boy Advance as Super Mario Advance 4: Super Mario Bros. 3 in 2003. The game was re-released for the Virtual Console service on the Wii, Wii U and 3DS. On September 19, 2018, the title was re-released on the Nintendo Switch Online service with additional network play.
223
views
2
comments
Mortal Kombat II - Arcade
Mortal Kombat II is a 1993 fighting video game originally produced by Midway for the arcades. It was later ported to several home systems, including MS-DOS, Amiga, Game Boy, Game Gear, Sega Genesis, 32X, Sega Saturn, Super Nintendo Entertainment System, and PlayStation, primarily in licensed versions developed by Probe Entertainment and Sculptured Software and published by Acclaim Entertainment (currently distributed by Warner Bros. Interactive Entertainment). It is the second title in the Mortal Kombat fighting game series and is a sequel to 1992's Mortal Kombat.
219
views
1
comment
Half-Life: Blue Shift
Half-Life: Blue Shift is an expansion pack for Valve Corporation's science fiction game Half-Life. The game was developed by Gearbox Software with Valve and published by Sierra Entertainment on June 12, 2001. Blue Shift is the second expansion for Half-Life, intended to be part of a Dreamcast port of the original game. Although this version was cancelled, the PC version remained in development as a separate product. It was released on Steam on August 24, 2005.[1]
History
In August 2005, Valve announced the official launch of Blue-Shift on Steam, allowing users to register their serial numbers to purchase a game package. Half-Life: Blue Shift would not have been implemented on the system from the beginning because the game uses a different engine than the original Half-Life[citation needed]. Unlike Opposing Force, Blue Shift does not offer any multiplayer mode, and is also a standalone expansion, not requiring Half-Life.
In it, the player takes control of a Black Mesa security guard, Barney Calhoun. The enemies are the same as Half-Life, but the expansion has some different weapons. The game also has a shorter duration than the original. Barney goes through several points that connect Half-Life and its expansions, such as the moment when Gordon jumps into a portal to enter the planet Xen, or the various mysterious appearances of G-Man. Along with Blue-Shift, a pack of weapons and high-definition character models that modified its content was released, along with Half-Life and Half-Life: Opposing Force.
176
views
Final Fight
Final Fight (ファイナルファイト - Fainaru Faito) is a side-scrolling beat-'em-up electronic game originally released by Capcom as an arcade in 1989, one of the most famous games for this style of play. It was the seventh game released by Capcom for its CPS-1 (CAPCOM System 1) arcade system. The player takes on one of three "good guys" to try to rescue a young woman captured by the street gang called "Madmociad Gear", who coincidentally is the daughter of Mike Haggar, one of the characters the player can choose from and who is also the mayor of the city in where the game takes place (Metro City). When the game was officially designed, it would be released as a sequel to the original Street Fighter game, and would be called Street Fighter '89, but the game had its title changed because of the big difference in style between the two games (Even so, the The game has ties to the Street Fighter series, and along with the first game in the series, was the precursor to Capcom's Street Fighter series), ranging from a common fighting game to a side-scrolling action game like Double Dragon or Golden Ax . Final Fight has been ported to several platforms, such as the Super Nintendo and Sega CD, since its original coin-based game (in arcades). Final Fight was followed by a series of sequels that were produced primarily for the home console market (Super Nintendo) and some of the game's characters would later re-appear in Street Fighter games.
111
views
The Revenge of Shinobi Final Boss + Good ending
The Revenge of Shinobi Final Boss + Good ending
110
views
Garfield- Caught in the Act - Final Boss and Ending
Garfield- Caught in the Act - Final Boss and Ending
101
views
The Flintstones
The Flintstones is a 2D platforming game where the player controls Fred Flintstone who must rescue Pebbles, Bam-Bam, Barney, and Wilma from the evil Cliff Vandercave. All three versions feature different levels and enemies.
Development
The Game Boy version developed by Twilight and the SNES version developed by Ocean Software were both published by Ocean, in 1994 and 1995 respectively. A Genesis version developed by Foley Hi-Tech was planned to be published by Ocean, but was instead briefly distributed exclusively via Sega Channel in North America in 1995.
91
views
The Revenge of Shinobi
The Revenge of Shinobi (ザ・スーパー・忍 The Super Shinobi?) is a platform video game developed and published by Sega in 1989. It is the second game in a saga, with the first Shinobi beginning in arcades in 1987 The soundtrack was composed by Yuzo Koshiro, and became famous worldwide.
History
Taken from the North American version manual:
In the impenetrable refuges of the Japanese mountains there are mystical warriors. They are Ninjas, masters of battle, who possess seemingly impossible powers. In combat, they can jump to dazzling heights; When hit, they remain unharmed; From the sky, they can summon flames to roast their enemies.
Joe Musashi has studied Ninja techniques since he was little. He was once the weakest in his dojo, easily dominated by everyone, but now, after years of practices and meditation, he has finally mastered the skill of ninjitsu; The art of hiding and deception, the art of the Katana and Shuriken, and the control of the four elements through Ninja magic. He became Shinobi. He sees and knows everything.
Now the evil criminal syndicate Neo Zeed has sent its ninjas, soldiers and spies to dominate the world. As a warning to the Oboro clan, they murdered Musashi's sensei, and kidnapped the beautiful Naoko. Shinobi swore to avenge his master's death. He will not stop until the last of Neo Zeed's subordinates is destroyed.
123
views
1
comment
Garfield: Caught in the Act
Garfield: Caught in the Act[a] is a 1995 side-scrolling platform game developed and published by Sega for the Genesis and Game Gear. A Microsoft Windows version followed. It is based upon Jim Davis' comic strip cat, Garfield, and draws inspiration from Davis' 1984 book Garfield: His 9 Lives. Odie scares Garfield while they are watching television and they fall on the TV, breaking it. Both characters attempt to repair it before Jon Arbuckle catches them; however, the thrown spare parts become an electronic monster known as the Glitch, transporting Garfield into the TV, where he must defeat him in order to get out.
Garfield: Caught in the Act was met with mixed reception from critics.
195
views
4
comments
Mickey Mania - The Timeless Adventures of Mickey Mouse
Mickey Mania: The Timeless Adventures of Mickey Mouse' is a game created for 16-bit platforms: Sega Mega Drive, Sega CD, and Super Nintendo, based on the Walt Disney cartoon character, Mickey Mouse. The game was later released on the PlayStation in 1996 as Mickey's Wild Adventure. A sequel, Mickey Mania 2, was planned but never released.
The game's levels are based on historical Mickey cartoons
205
views
what good energy between them!
what good energy between them!
Better than Guitar Hero!
176
views
1
comment
Double Dangerous Dave - Apple II Gameplay
Double Dangerous Dave - Apple II Gameplay
111
views
1
comment
Zombies Ate My Neighbours SNES Final Boss and Ending
Zombies Ate My Neighbours SNES Final Boss and Ending
143
views
2
comments
STREET FIGHTER II THE ANIMATED MOVIE
Street Fighter II: The Animated Movie, known as Street Fighter II Movie (ストリートファイター II MOVIE, Sutorīto Faitā Tsū Mūbī) in Japan and Australia, is a 1994 anime film adaptation of the Street Fighter II fighting game written by Kenichi Imai, directed by Gisaburō Sugii and animated by Group TAC. The film, originally released in Japan on August 6, 1994, was released theatrically in the United Kingdom, France, and Spain, and was adapted into English in dubbed and subtitled format by Animaze for Manga Entertainment. It was distributed by Toei Company in Japan, while 20th Century Fox also distributed in other countries.
The film was a critical and commercial success. Group TAC later produced another loose adaptation of the Street Fighter II game, the anime series Street Fighter II V. Though unrelated to the film, a handful of Animaze voice actors reprised their roles for their English dub of the series, produced after ADV Films's dub.
A live-action film, Street Fighter, was released on December 23, 1994, in the United States and May 6, 1995, in Japan by Universal Pictures and Columbia TriStar Film Distributors International, respectively.
346
views
1
comment