3rd May 2010, 3:11 AM
More than that, the GBC one lacks other things like wind.
Oh and ABF, the FDS version does so have saving. In fact that's the only way you could expect to see worlds A-D in it. The FDS version is for sale on the virtual console store. I wanted to see the original for myself and it was cheap. The continue trick not only works, it works if you reload the game too. Further, it saves how many times you've beaten the games. You actually need to beat it like 10 times in order to unlock the A-D worlds. Annoyingly stupid way of doing it if you ask me. Other than that, it's the same incredibly hard game. The art style is a little more surreal than the first I'd say, though they both look very similar there's little things like those oddly shaped trees.
Kid Chameleon, I need to play that at some point. I recently found out what I THOUGHT was Kid Chameleon was Chameleon Twist instead. I suppose that's different.
Oh and ABF, the FDS version does so have saving. In fact that's the only way you could expect to see worlds A-D in it. The FDS version is for sale on the virtual console store. I wanted to see the original for myself and it was cheap. The continue trick not only works, it works if you reload the game too. Further, it saves how many times you've beaten the games. You actually need to beat it like 10 times in order to unlock the A-D worlds. Annoyingly stupid way of doing it if you ask me. Other than that, it's the same incredibly hard game. The art style is a little more surreal than the first I'd say, though they both look very similar there's little things like those oddly shaped trees.
Kid Chameleon, I need to play that at some point. I recently found out what I THOUGHT was Kid Chameleon was Chameleon Twist instead. I suppose that's different.
"On two occasions, I have been asked [by members of Parliament], 'Pray, Mr. Babbage, if you put into the machine wrong figures, will the right answers come out?' I am not able to rightly apprehend the kind of confusion of ideas that could provoke such a question." ~ Charles Babbage (1791-1871)