Hatsune Miku: Project DIVA Arcade (初音ミク Project DIVA Arcade) is a 2010 arcade rhythm game created by Sega and Crypton Future Media for arcade machines. The game is a port of the 2009 video game, Hatsune Miku: Project DIVA, with updated visuals and was released on June 23, 2010 in Japan with limited international release in countries such as Singapore. Like the original the game primarily makes use of Vocaloids, a series of singing synthesizer software, and the songs created using these Vocaloids, most notably, the virtual diva Hatsune Miku.
A sequel titled Hatsune Miku: Project DIVA Arcade Future Tone (初音ミク Project DIVA Arcade Future Tone) was released on November 21, 2013. Notable changes include upgraded graphics and physics, a Touch Slider panel for arrow-shaped notes and new songs, as well as running on the Sega Nu arcade board. The arcade game has been ported to PlayStation 4 under the title Hatsune Miku: Project DIVA Future Tone (初音ミク Project DIVA Future Tone) The game has been released digitally in two versions, Future Sound and Colorful Tone, along with a Prelude demo, on June 23, 2016 in Japan and January 10, 2017 in North America and Europe, with an definitive version with new tracks and modules, alongside all three DLC packs, entitled Hatsune Miku: Project DIVA Future Tone DX (初音ミク Project DIVA Future Tone DX), was released phiscally and digitally in Japan on November 22, 2017., Nintendo Switch as Hatsune Miku: Project Diva MegaMix, also known in Japan and Asia as Hatsune Miku: Project DIVA Mega39's (初音ミク Project DIVA Mega39's) and Microsoft Windows as Hatsune Miku: Project DIVA MegaMix+, also known in Japan and Asia as Hatsune Miku: Project DIVA Mega39's+ (初音ミク Project DIVA Mega39's+).
Robotron: 2084 (also referred to as Robotron) is a multidirectional shooter developed by Eugene Jarvis and Larry DeMar of Vid Kidz and released in arcades in Williams Electronics in 1982. The game is set in the year 2084 in a fictional world where robots have turned against humans in a cybernetic revolt. The aim is to defeat endless waves of robots, rescue surviving humans, and earn as many points as possible.
The designers, Eugene Jarvis and Larry DeMar, drew inspiration from Nineteen Eighty-Four, Berzerk and Space Invaders. A two-joystick control scheme was implemented to provide the player with more precise controls, and enemies with different behaviors were added to make the game challenging. Jarvis and DeMar designed the game to instill panic in players by presenting them with conflicting goals and having on-screen projectiles coming from multiple directions.
Robotron: 2084 was critically and commercially successful. Praise among critics focused on the game's intense action and control scheme. Though not the first game with a twin joystick control scheme, Robotron: 2084 is cited as the game that popularized it. It was ported to numerous home systems—most of which are hampered by the lack of two joysticks—and inspired the development of other games such as Smash TV (1990). The game is frequently listed as one of Jarvis's best contributions to the video game industry.
(Source - Wikipedia)
[NOTE: FOR INSTRUCTIONAL PURPOSES ONLY; SAVE STATES HAVE BEEN UTILIZED DURING THIS RECORDING OF "1942" (NES)!]
The Grindhouse
1942 [Part 3]
NES
NA Version
Normal Difficulty Mode [Only Mode]
PART 3 FEATURES:
-Stage 15 [Normal Mode]
-Stage 16 [Normal Mode]
-Stage 17 [Normal Mode]
-Stage 18 [Normal Mode]
-Stage 19 [Normal Mode]
-Stage 20 [Normal Mode]
-Stage 21 [Normal Mode]
*
GAME INFORMATION:
1942 is a vertically scrolling shooter by Capcom that was released as an arcade video game in 1984. Designed by Yoshiki Okamoto, it was the first game in the 194X series, and was followed by 1943: The Battle of Midway.
1942 is set in the Pacific Theater of World War II, and is loosely based on the Battle of Midway. Despite the game being created by Japanese developers, the goal is to reach Tokyo and destroy the Japanese air fleet; this was due to being the first Capcom game designed with Western markets in mind. It went on to be a commercial success in arcades, becoming Japan's fifth highest-grossing table arcade game of 1986 and one of top five highest-grossing arcade conversion kits that year in the United States. It was ported to the Nintendo Entertainment System, selling over 1 million copies worldwide, along with other home systems.
(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: Part 3 features Mission 7: Deep Strike, Mission 8: Shattered Skies and Mission 9: Operation Bunker Shot]
Ace Combat 04: Shattered Skies (released as Ace Combat: Distant Thunder in Europe) is a 2001 combat flight simulation video game developed and published by Namco for the PlayStation 2. It is the fourth entry in the Ace Combat series and the first in the series to be released for the PlayStation 2. The game's plot, set in a fictional alternate universe where Earth has been ravaged by asteroid impacts, follows the player character "Mobius 1", a fighter pilot in a multinational military coalition who spearheads the liberation of the fictional continent of Usea from the expansionist country of Erusea.
Ace Combat 04 features arcade-style gameplay with elements of both realism and fantasy; for example, while the game has realistic flight controls and is set in the modern day, the player's aircraft can carry dozens of missiles in hammerspace and conduct difficult flight maneuvers such as flying through tunnels, and superweapons such as massive railguns appear in certain missions. The game features an 18-mission campaign and a multiplayer battle mode. A total of 21 aircraft, including both real and fictional aircraft, can be unlocked and equipped with a variety of special weaponry.
Ace Combat 04 began development as a reboot of the franchise, following the lukewarm reception of Ace Combat 3: Electrosphere. The game was developed by "AC04 Project", a team of developers who previously worked on Ace Combat 3. Ace Combat 04 was critically acclaimed at launch, with critics praising its gameplay, controls, plot, graphics, and music. The game was the highest-selling entry in the series until it was succeeded by Ace Combat 7: Skies Unknown in 2019.
(Source - Wikipedia)
1991 Du Ma Racing ("Enjoyable Horse Racing 1991") is a horse racing game developed for the Nintendo Entertainment System by Idea-Tek and published by Super Mega in Taiwan during 1991. The game offers two modes of play: race-mode and gamble-mode.
(Source - Giant Bomb)
BASED SPORTSBALL 2023 (feat. The Salty Sirloins)
Super Mega Baseball (PS4 - 2014, Metalhead Software) [NA Version]
GAME #19: Salty Sirloins vs. Moonstars
May 31st, 2023
GAME INFORMATION:
The first game, Super Mega Baseball, was released on December 16, 2014 as a PlayStation 3 and PlayStation 4 cross-buy title on the U.S. PlayStation Store. It was released on the European PlayStation Store on April 1, 2015.
An updated version called Super Mega Baseball: Extra Innings was released on Xbox One on August 14, 2015 and it was released on Steam for PC on August 21, 2015. The extra features from this version were released as free DLC for the PlayStation 3 and PlayStation 4 in 2016. Super Mega Baseball: Extra Innings was released on Shield Android TV on March 24, 2016.
Super Mega Baseball was a critical success, earning an average score of 85/100 on Metacritic, based on 14 reviews. Gaming-Age gave the game a grade of "A," saying that "Because really, Super Mega Baseball is the sort of fun, easy to pick up diversion that video game baseball was at the very beginning of its lifespan — and if it's as great as it is here, there's every reason to believe it can still fulfill that function." IGN, meanwhile, gave the game an 8.1 "Great" rating, praising the game's sense of humor and easy pick-up-and-play gameplay, but criticizing its presentation. It was named "Sports Game of the Year" by Polygon.
(Source - Wikipedia)