26th June 2015, 2:36 PM
NES
--
RoboWarrior - $5, cart only. Bomberman-style game, but single player and with a slightly different setup.
Genesis
--
BlockOut - $5, complete. The Genesis version of this super hard and frustrating 3-d Tetris-style game.
32X
--
Golf Magazine presents 36 Greatest Holes starring Fred Couples - $3, cart and box (no manual) - in polygonal 3d!
Saturn
--
Huper 3D Pinball - $7, complete. Okay-looking pinball game with some of the most ridiculous hype ever in the first paragraph of the manual (quoted below).
Sega Master System
--
Shinobi - $15, complete - A great classic, I'm very happy to finally have this one!
Poseidon Wars 3-D - $15, complete - Lightgun-style shooter, though this game only support the gamepad. That's okay, I'm terrible with light guns. It does support the 3D Glasses, which is awesome; there are very few 3d glasses games, so it's nice to get another one. :)
Hyper 3D Pinball's first page in the manual:
Yes, this is real.
--
RoboWarrior - $5, cart only. Bomberman-style game, but single player and with a slightly different setup.
Genesis
--
BlockOut - $5, complete. The Genesis version of this super hard and frustrating 3-d Tetris-style game.
32X
--
Golf Magazine presents 36 Greatest Holes starring Fred Couples - $3, cart and box (no manual) - in polygonal 3d!
Saturn
--
Huper 3D Pinball - $7, complete. Okay-looking pinball game with some of the most ridiculous hype ever in the first paragraph of the manual (quoted below).
Sega Master System
--
Shinobi - $15, complete - A great classic, I'm very happy to finally have this one!
Poseidon Wars 3-D - $15, complete - Lightgun-style shooter, though this game only support the gamepad. That's okay, I'm terrible with light guns. It does support the 3D Glasses, which is awesome; there are very few 3d glasses games, so it's nice to get another one. :)
Hyper 3D Pinball's first page in the manual:
Quote:Introduction
So you think you're a hardened gamer? Think again. All those years that you've spent playing infinite variations on the Space Invaders theme count for nothing. All those weekends that you've spent bouncing from one day-glo platform to another in one of the in finite variations on the Donkey Kong theme count for zip. And don't even mention those dazzlingly vapid beat-'em-ups with their endless succession of moronic 'hidden' moves. Until you've mastered the silver ball, you haven't even started gaming.
Pinball is greater than the sum of its parts. At its core is a very simple concept -- all you have to do is keep the silver ball in play. And if this was any other plain vanilla video game, you've able to master it pretty quickly. But pinball's not like that -- it's not a game of absolutes. Even if you hit the ball with a specific amount of power in a specific direction from a specific angle, you won't achieve the same results every time. In pinball, your decision-making ability is tested to the maximum -- you simply cannot expect specific things to happen at precisely the right moment. In effect, pinball is like life. In the outside world, events don't unfurl in a preordained manner. In the real world, random things happen in a random order. Deal with it.
Yes, this is real.
