Saturday, September 5, 2015

Minecraft NES Pixel Art: The Gallery

"Ma Fratelli"
The Goonies II

"Alex"
River City Ransom

"Aquamentus"
The Legend of Zelda

"Bang"
Clash at Demonhead

"Vic Viper"
Gradius

"Ryu Hayabusa"
Ninja Gaiden

"Excitebike"

"Jason & SOPHIA 3rd"
Blaster Master

"Batman"

"Billy Bob"
Gun.Smoke

"Karnov"

"Boy & Blobert"
A Boy and His Blob: Trouble on Blobolonia

"Master Higgins"
Hudson's Adventure Island

"Blue Darknut"
The Legend of Zelda

"Satyr"
The Battle of Olympus

"Hero"
Faxanadu

"Descendant of Erdrick"
Dragon Warrior

"Jaws"

"Lyll"
Legacy of the Wizard

"Luke Skywalker"
Star Wars

"Red Wizard"
Final Fantasy

"Don Flamenco"
Mike Tyson's Punch Out!!

"Link"
Zelda II: The Adventure of Link

"Mario"
Super Mario Bros.

"Ultimate Warrior vs. Rick Rude"
WWF WrestleMania Challenge

"Peter Pepper"
Burgertime

"Roas"
Legacy of the Wizard

"Thomas"
Kung Fu

"Slime"
Dragon Warrior

"Mark & Crissy"
Friday the 13th

"Thief"
Final Fantasy

"Toad"
Super Mario Bros. 2

"Silver Surfer"

"Pochi"
Legacy of the Wizard

"Magnet Man"
Mega Man 3

"Firebrand"
Gargoyle's Quest II

"Link"
The Legend of Zelda

"1-up"
Mega Man

"Fighter"
Final Fantasy

"Orpheus"
The Battle of Olympus

"Error"
Zelda II: The Adventure of Link"

"Thrilla Gorilla"
T&C Surf Designs: Thrilla's Surfari

"Abobo"
Double Dragon

"Bill Rizer"
Contra

"Thor"
River City Ransom

 "Konami Man"
The Goonies II

"Lester"
Skate or Die 2: The Search for Double Trouble

 "Snake"
Metal Gear

"Gizmo"
Gremlins 2: The New Batch

"Max Force"
Narc

 "Kazuo"
Sweet Home

 "Samus Aran"
Metroid

"Duck"
Duck Hunt

 "Willow"

 "Haggar"
Mighty Final Fight

"Eggplant Wizard"
Kid Icarus

"Bubby"
Rainbow Islands

"Bowser"
Super Mario Bros.

"The King of Elves"
Faxanadu

"Tanooki Mario"
Super Mario Bros. 3

"Pit"
Kid Icarus

"Spelunker"

"Rodney"
Skate or Die 2: The Search for Double Trouble

"Jason"
Friday the 13th



Friday, August 28, 2015

Leaving Behind a Legacy


Mega Man Legacy Collection
Capcom
Steam (2015)
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The release of Mega Man Legacy Collection has been rather controversial with fans. Here are a few facts everyone should know:



The NES cartridges have suffered remarkably from inflation, and aren't equipped with frustration pain killers (quick save features). Buy them if you want them. The controller is certainly more suitable.



You have the choice to emulate. Use it if you choose it.



The Mega Man Anniversary Collection on GCN included Mega Man 7&8 and some sweet little JP only fighting games, but it also reversed the shoot and jump buttons for a crippling button layout. Regardless, it was a great collection and you can buy it.



Mega Man Legacy Collection doesn't include 9&10. It would have been better if it did, just like if it had also included 7,8, Mega Man & Bass, and the entire X and Zero collections.



Fifteen dollars is really not a lot of money, ya know? I've spent more for broken Early Access games. These are six of our favorite games of all time, with trophies, art, music, and challenges.



The slowdown and flicker plagued our beloved NES cartridges, too.



You may think Capcom sucks because of their recent business methods, or for their treatment of the Mega Man producer and product in the past. That doesn't mean this package sucks.


Saturday, March 14, 2015

The Doomed Days of Our Lives


Rogue Legacy
Cellar Door Games
PS3 (2014)
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Over the past few years, I've heard the term "roguelike" being used to describe many upcoming fantasy-themed games. Even though practically anything with a sword has been my jam since the original Zelda, screenshots of said games failed to pique my interest. The reemerging genre was being exemplified by previously underutilized ideas like permadeath and random maps, but the big turnoff for me was the tile-based gameplay. Rogue Legacy however focuses on twitch-perfect Metroidvania action instead, which is a grind I can get behind.





There's a neat little family tree gimmick which ties it all together. A foolhardy knight storms the randomized castle with a sword drawn outward, as if charging into certain doom. It's because they are, and will surely die in a matter of minutes. You will never see them again (permadeath) but can choose one of three random heirs, each with their own often hilarious attributes. Choosing an heir with IBS won't impact your play, but there are throwaway traits like vertigo which are all but unplayable and only novel at a glance.







The chosen heir can immediately exchange the treasure found by the previous ancestor to level up the overall family so that the bloodline grows exponentially stronger. Therein lies the addictive part of Rogue Legacy: to spend the profits you just worked so hard for is to begin the cycle over with a new heir. Rinse, repeat.






 I meant to give it a quick try one night but ended up playing until morning. I started discussing and researching it constantly, spreading the word to friends. I was hooked; Rogue Legacy was the real deal. I hadn't been that engrossed in grinding levels in quite some time. I was working toward collecting every achievement sans the insane trophy with a requirement to beat the game with fifteen heirs or less.






Then, at the peak of my obsession, my save file was mysteriously corrupted and erased. I was nearing level 150 and had three of the four bosses defeated. To start over at that point was beyond discouraging, although it couldn't have been much more than ten hours lost.





Now, I can tolerate the grind in only small doses, running through the castle with a few heirs per sitting as opposed to binge playing all night long. It took a corrupted file for me to regard Rogue Legacy without blinders, but the second time around, the novelty started to wear thin and I surmised that a randomized castle could never be as special as one that's fixed and familiar.

Friday, February 20, 2015

Steam Quickies #3

Chivalry: Medieval Warfare
Torn Banner Studios
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Think of Chivalry as a medieval Call of Duty. For many, that alone is enough to justify the purchase. All of the familiar FPS multiplayer options are included. If you want full-on warfare, join a team deathmatch. If you're tired of getting stabbed in the back, switch to singles duels. The combat is intense albeit clunky. If you want serious competition and an untarnished loss column, look elsewhere. Chivalry is for those who don't mind regularly getting their heads lopped off.

Nidhogg
Messhof
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Nidhogg is akin to a 2D Bushido Blade. Quick and slick fencing controls support a tug-of-war system in which fatal thrusts yield a player more time to push back their opponent's respawn location. It's almost too basic, but this one is all about quality over quantity, from the brilliant graphics and soundtrack to the precision in the combat.

Wednesday, February 18, 2015

Steam Quickies #2

World of Diving
Vertigo Games
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Vertigo does an exceptional job simulating the diving experience with or without the Oculus VR enhancement. It may even be too realistic; I looked forward to exploring a seemingly endless ocean floor like in Ecco the Dolphin or Treasures of the Deep to a lesser extent, but World of Diving offers a more organized, site-specific experience. With only a few maps to explore at this point, this will be another test for the Early Access development machine.

Race the Sun
Flippfly LLC
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It's not just any endless runner featuring procedural generation, it's the best looking one. Race the Sun is sure to captivate the minimalist genre's die-hard players, but the rest will move on quickly after its cosmetic appeal subsides.

Wednesday, February 11, 2015

A Return to the Golden Age


Double Dragon Trilogy
Dot Emu (originally Technos Japan)
Steam (2015, originally 1987-1990)
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If you're an avid player of the brawler genre (yes, we still exist) Double Dragon Trilogy is a no-brainer. For $5.99, young gamers can also now experience the history of the virtual mean streets during the late 1980's. The old school can even meet the new school online for cooperative play. What else do you need?






Not much. Double Dragon was never complicated: street punks kidnap girlfriend, must get girlfriend back. This simple premise was flawlessly presented with no dialogue at the start of the original in a matter of seconds. Ass-kicking ensues thereafter.




There’s been plenty of sequels, remakes, and reworks over the years, and none of them were too shabby (save for the terrible one-on-one fighting entry that was Double Dragon V). With Trilogy, you should expect more arcade faithful versions of the original three, rather than the fondly remembered and popular NES ports. I’m sure we can all agree that Double Dragon II for NES is the superior version, but the original was a great game in its own right.





The very best in the series, Double Dragon Advance, incorporated skills from previous entries like the headbutt, spinkick, hyper knee and uppercut, mount, stomp, wall jump, grab, and parry to name a few. These powers complimented each other for a furious festival of flowing fists and feet. You won’t find such a diverse arsenal of moves in Trilogy- only the simplistic fighting styles that graced arcades back in the golden age.




That being said, don't assume the most recently released homage, Double Dragon Neon, is the superlative entry. While it did wield an impressive move list and an insider's nostalgia, it never felt quite like a Technos game. For those looking for the genuine experience starring their beloved super-deformed characters and pick-up-and-play controls, Trilogy is the way to go, even if the platforming has aged beyond rationality by today's standards.