Welcome to "Hardcore Console Theater"! This Video Playlist features Console Video Games as I attempt to beat those games on Hard Difficulty or Higher Difficulties!
[NOTE: IF I AM UNABLE TO BEAT A GAME, I WILL BE MAKING OTHER ATTEMPTS TO BEAT IT LATER IN THE VIDEO SERIES "THE FULL MONTY"!]
Welcome to "White Lines Wednesdays" where I cold-play digital pinball tables with the goal of setting my personal HI-Score!
White Lines Wednesdays
Pinball FX3 - Tesla
PlayStation 4
2017
Zen Studios, Ltd.
NA Version
Normal Difficulty Mode [Three Balls]
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SCORING STATISTICS ON "NORMAL MODE" [AS OF 04/08/24]:
THIS SESSION: 1 Game
TOTAL SESSIONS [1]: 1 Games
THIS SESSION THEORHETICAL CREDIT COST: 1 Credits ($0.50)
TOTAL SESSIONS THEORHETICAL CREDIT COST [1]: 1 Credits ($0.50)
SESSION HI-SCORE: 8,987,700 [04/08/24]
TOP HI-SCORE: 8,987,700 [04/08/24]
AVG. SCORE PER GAME [2 GAMES]: 5,782,200
SCORING TREND: UP
PREVIOUS HI-SCORE: 2,576,700 [08/21/23]
VERDICT: SUCCESS
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RELATED VIDEO PLAYLISTS:
-The White Lines Project: https://odysee.com/$/playlist/15e58f4cee4fc38122cad51cd635f1aa1bb81f61
-White Lines Wednesdays: https://odysee.com/$/playlist/4800f0371a9d7031eef6c2bf7f544c69a47fecbe
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GAME INFORMATION:
Pinball FX 3 is a pinball simulator video game developed and published by Zen Studios and released for Microsoft Windows, Xbox One, PlayStation 4 in September 2017 and then released for the Nintendo Switch in December 2017.
(Source - Wikipedia)
Burning Fight is a beat 'em up arcade game released by SNK in 1991 for the Neo Geo MVS system. Introduced to capture a share in the then-popular beat 'em ups market, it was meant to compete with Technōs' Double Dragon, the leader of the genre at the time. Three years after its release in the arcades and on the Neo Geo AES, it was released on Neo Geo CD as the only other home version.
The game is produced by Eikichi Kawasaki, one of SNK's founders and the man behind various well-known SNK titles, such as Fatal Fury, Art of Fighting and Samurai Shodown series.
A re-released version of Burning Fight is included in SNK Arcade Classics Vol. 1, which was released for the PlayStation 2, PlayStation Portable and Wii in 2008.
(Source - Wikipedia)
Capcom Arcade Stadium is an arcade video game compilation by Capcom. It includes 32 arcade games originally published by Capcom between 1984 and 2001. The compilation was initially released on Nintendo Switch in February 2021, then on PlayStation 4, Windows, and Xbox One later in May 2021, and Amazon Luna in May 2022.
A sequel, Capcom Arcade 2nd Stadium, was released on July 22, 2022.
(Source - Wikipedia)
[NOTE: FOR INSTRUCTIONAL PURPOSES ONLY; SAVE STATES UTILIZED DURING THIS RECORDING OF "3-D WorldRunner" (NES)!]
Gamer By Proxy
3-D WorldRunner
NES
1987
Square Co., Ltd./Acclaim Entertainment, Inc.
World 3-1
NA Version of "とびだせ大作戦"
Normal Difficulty Mode [Only Mode]
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RELATED VIDEO PLAYLISTS:
-The Cutscene Project: https://odysee.com/$/playlist/f9a358205d05d0931685aa04af21d661021f7ddb
-Gamer By Proxy: https://odysee.com/$/playlist/debfa18770272fb6d0e04a5014cde3ef74a16e83
-The Grindhouse: https://odysee.com/$/playlist/26a65eec44d8ea008c244dda02d1a0c43e9224ee
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GAME INFORMATION:
The 3-D Battles of WorldRunner (shortened to 3-D WorldRunner on the North American box art), originally released in Japan as Tobidase Daisakusen, is a 1987 third-person rail shooter platform video game developed and published by Square for the Family Computer Disk System. It was later ported to cartridge format and published by Acclaim for the Nintendo Entertainment System.
For its time, the game was technically advanced; the game's three-dimensional scrolling effect is very similar to the linescroll effects used by Pole Position and many racing games of the day as well as the forward-scrolling effect of Sega's 1985 third-person rail shooter Space Harrier. 3-D WorldRunner was an early forward-scrolling pseudo-3D third-person platform-action game where players were free to move in any forward-scrolling direction and had to leap over obstacles and chasms. It was also notable for being one of the first stereoscopic 3-D games. WorldRunner was designed by Hironobu Sakaguchi and Nasir Gebelli, and composed by Nobuo Uematsu. All would later rise to fame as core members of the team behind the popular Final Fantasy role-playing video game series.
(Source - Wikipedia)
Capcom Arcade Cabinet is a compilation of seventeen Capcom 1980s arcade games for the PlayStation 3 and Xbox 360. The compilation was released in five separate packs of three games during February–May 2013. A purchase of all five packs included two additional games free. The full compilation pack was released in April 2013. An arcade machine was made to promote the Capcom Arcade Cabinet series at the Gadget Show Live 2013 in Birmingham, UK.
(Source - Wikipedia)
Shock Troopers is a run and gun arcade game developed by Saurus and published by SNK in 1997 for the Neo-Geo arcade and home platform. Gameplay involves taking command of one or three soldiers in an eight-way shooter. A second game in the series, Shock Troopers: 2nd Squad, followed up in 1998.
(Source - Wikipedia)
After Burner was followed by After Burner II, which was released in the same year (1987), also released for the Sega X Board arcade system. Some consider this game to be more of a revision of its predecessor, rather than an entirely new game, a practice later repeated by Sega for Galaxy Force and Galaxy Force II. In the game, players fly an F-14 Tomcat jet fighter, gunning down enemies while avoiding incoming fire. After Burner II came both a standard arcade cabinet and a servo actuated, sit-down motion simulator version which moved according to the motion of the plane onscreen. The cockpit would bank in the same direction the on-screen aircraft was banking. It is an updated version of After Burner, with the addition of throttle controls. It was a commercial success, becoming Japan's highest-grossing arcade game of 1988.
The game was mostly created by three men: Yu Suzuki, Satoshi Mifune, and Kawaguchi. During development, it was codenamed Studio 128 to specify the secrecy of the project.
(Source - Wikipedia)
Pong is a table tennis–themed twitch arcade sports video game, featuring simple two-dimensional graphics, manufactured by Atari and originally released in 1972. It was one of the earliest arcade video games; it was created by Allan Alcorn as a training exercise assigned to him by Atari co-founder Nolan Bushnell, but Bushnell and Atari co-founder Ted Dabney were surprised by the quality of Alcorn's work and decided to manufacture the game. Bushnell based the game's concept on an electronic ping-pong game included in the Magnavox Odyssey, the first home video game console. In response, Magnavox later sued Atari for patent infringement.
Pong was the first commercially successful video game, and it helped to establish the video game industry along with the Magnavox Odyssey. Soon after its release, several companies began producing games that closely mimicked its gameplay. Eventually, Atari's competitors released new types of video games that deviated from Pong's original format to varying degrees, and this, in turn, led Atari to encourage its staff to move beyond Pong and produce more innovative games themselves.
Atari released several sequels to Pong that built upon the original's gameplay by adding new features. During the 1975 Christmas season, Atari released a home version of Pong exclusively through Sears retail stores. The home version was also a commercial success and led to numerous clones. The game was remade on numerous home and portable platforms following its release. Pong is part of the permanent collection of the Smithsonian Institution in Washington, D.C., due to its cultural impact.
(Source - Wikipedia)