this game was so damn fun, but it's so fucking obscure it's easier to find gold at the end of the rainbow than finding a copy online
There were sequels to digimon world? Oh wow, I loved the first one when I was a kid. Even if I never got very far in it. Actually I still have it, maybe I should have another go someday.Imat said:The first and third were fantastic, I still play them. Never owned the second and fourth, but gameplay footage from the second turned me off and I've never owned a PS2.AVATAR_RAGE said:Digimon World. I loved these games when I was a youngun but alas no one seems to have heard of em.
Good to know.217not237 said:Oh, but only the PS1 version of Glover was shit! The N64 version ruled!TIMESWORDSMAN said:The only game I can think of that's proper obscure is Glover, and Glover was shit.
OT: Glover
I remember that one - didn't it go to abandonware a few years in?Cowabungaa said:Netstorm: Islands at War.
The only game I ever managed to really share with my father, who now hates videogames with an almost rabid passion. It was a really unique and different kind of RTS, with static siege engines where the only moving things were resource gatherers and an almost Tetris-like bridge building mechanic.
Bubsy made me hate the Playstation for like, 15 years.Vault101 said:bubsy....
no one can see it for the work of brilliance it is
That was a PS2 launch title, my cousin and I played through it right after Christmas when he got his PS2.fluffybunny937 said:I remember this game on PS2, I think it was called "Bouncer". You play a bouncer at a bar who gets in a fight with the wrong guy and get wrapped up in a bigger story.
wrong bubsy, my freindChemical Alia said:Bubsy made me hate the Playstation for like, 15 years.Vault101 said:bubsy....
no one can see it for the work of brilliance it is
I owned it. I wished there were more games that gave you many vehicles to choose from to slaughter giant bugs.baddude1337 said:Body Harvest for the N64. I adored and played the hell out of this game on the N64. Apparently is wasn't very well received at the time, which is probably why nobody bought it.
And this is why I prefer 90's and early 2000's gaming scene way over the current. There were just so much more experimental and well-designed games. I really want to play Mischief Makers again, and Cel Damage is a fun wacky mindless destroy all game I don't see often enough.Barry Purse said:Nazulu said:Mine is Mischief Makers 64. The game looks pretty crappy on the box but it was filled with awesome challenges and boss fights, including different game play stle than usual.
THIS.
THIS GAME.
I wish more games would let you grab enemies and shake the shit out of them.
Has anyone here played Cell Damage? A fantastically underrated game, with addictive game play and the best cell shading I've seen.
I won't have a bad word said against that game, it was awesome. I never finished it though which is something I regret. Rare should get away from Microsoft and just make games for everyone.Aurora Firestorm said:Jet Force Gemini. I loved that game so much, and it never got any attention because Rare was more famous for Donkey Kong and other such things.
That's Super Aleste (or Space Megaforce in the US), one of the most critically-acclaimed shooters on the SNES - at least it should be.Scarim Coral said:I assume no one else had played this SNES game since no one can't figure out what it was called including me.
What I remember is that I'm pretty sure it was made in Japan cos the intro scene had an anime sprite style which star the pliot and this mystic magical woman which I think she was colour green in some way.
It was top down type of shooter which you control a spaceship (sort of like R-Type) which there are several weapons pick up to choose from (one of them several green jellybean follow you arrow and shoot at the same time as you).
The first level was above the forest and I remember one of the later level was in outer base which the boss was a base but when you zoon out of it, it's actually an face.
The game over screen was the two characters in Chibi style as they set up an fire and camp for the night as their ship had crash down burning.
Holy crap! You found it! Finally my long search for that game is over! I type that name onto Youtube and Google image and it both match (despite the lack of the two characters image).Grygor said:That's Super Aleste (or Space Megaforce in the US), one of the most critically-acclaimed shooters on the SNES - at least it should be.Scarim Coral said:I assume no one else had played this SNES game since no one can't figure out what it was called including me.
What I remember is that I'm pretty sure it was made in Japan cos the intro scene had an anime sprite style which star the pliot and this mystic magical woman which I think she was colour green in some way.
It was top down type of shooter which you control a spaceship (sort of like R-Type) which there are several weapons pick up to choose from (one of them several green jellybean follow you arrow and shoot at the same time as you).
The first level was above the forest and I remember one of the later level was in outer base which the boss was a base but when you zoon out of it, it's actually an face.
The game over screen was the two characters in Chibi style as they set up an fire and camp for the night as their ship had crash down burning.
But I'm a little confused, because the intro and game over screen you describe were only present in the Japanese version of the game.
I liked Bubsy well enough to get my parents to rent it repeatedly.Vault101 said:bubsy....
no one can see it for the work of brilliance it is
HAHA, the Army Men games ruled when we were young! Air attack was my fav too!llafnwod said:Army Men: Air Attack.
WEEEE'RREEE FREEEEEE [http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VftqSnsfhKQ&t=0m17s]
What an awful, awful game. But co-op with another ten year old makes everything better.