Sonic Blast Man is a beat'em up based on the arcade classic. In this version Sonic Blast Man must save the Earth from diverse kinds of evil forces, from street gangs and terrorists, to aliens and robots and finally, an evil clone of himself under the name of "Heavy Blast Man". The fight starts on a construction site in Earth and ends up in outer space.
Scarlet Rivensin: The Ruiner is a dark, nightmarish, third person action modification for Doom3 & Dhewm 3. The player assumes the role of a herald of Death & fights hordes of the damned using unique weapons, abilities and spells.
Dawnblade is an Action RPG where you can loot dungeons, battle monsters, evolve pets, find treasures, and forge legendary equipment on an epic journey to reclaim the mythical weapon known as the ‘Dawnblade’.
Masterderrico’s deliciously macabre take on the beat em’ up genre. Step into vile Jennifer's demonic shoes and rip your way through an atmospheric tale of psychosis that will stretch the senses and shock you at every turn. Wield a sickening array of moves and weapons to tear down your foes. Smell the fear spread as you literally shred enemies to pieces with gory screen coating fatalities. Paint the walls with innards of those who thought to oppose you. Experience the horror, be the horrific. Do what must be done!
Legacy of Kain: Dead Sun was a cancelled action-adventure video game developed by Climax Studios for Square Enix Europe, with an accompanying multiplayer component developed separately by Psyonix. Leaks described Dead Sun as a story-based action-adventure inspired by Legacy of Kain: Soul Reaver (1999) (the second installment in the series) and Nintendo's The Legend of Zelda. The game featured an open world, and combined cinematic, violent combat with dungeon crawls, puzzles, and boss encounters. Links to past Legacy of Kain entries figured into the design, such as the shifting mechanic of the Soul Reaver titles, which enabled players to alternate between two planes of existence.
Is nothing sacred? RollerGames, the 21st Century's most popular thrill sport, is the latest victim of V.I.P.E.R. (Vicious International Punks and Eternal Renegades). With their greedy eyes on RollerGames' mega prize money, they've corrupted three teams and kidnapped Emerson "Skeeter" Bankhead, the games' beloved commissioner.
You and your own three teams of righteous skate kings must stop V.I.P.E.R.'s criminal venom from infecting the entire city. So you've got to take the fight to the streets. And the sewers, and the junkyards, and the highways and the jungles . . . through six stages of dastardly traps of doom as you leap over open manholes, careening oil drums and treacherous land-slides. Race around oil slicks and man-eating canines. And avoid ambush by combat copters, bomb-wielding goons and creeps like Captain Meat Hook and the Fish Face. But time is against you. And so are V.I.P.E.R.'s judo masters, skateboard thugs, motorcycle madmen and other assorted sinister scum.
If your multi-faceted fists can't punch
Love Love Knuckle is a goofy beat-em-up starring buff men wearing animal heads. Players use their buff animal man to beat up other buff animal men and collect the high-calorie sweets they drop to recover health. In between battles, players can buy upgrades to customize their character, including new heads.
Take your first steps in this adventurous journey. Fight alongside Kolossus, Barbataus, and Orrore Profondo to become Gorm Island's champion! Be careful though...many creatures will try to take you down...show them how determined you are!
Slashout is the third installment to the Spikeout series, released for Sega NAOMI hardware in 2000. Unlike other games in the series, Slashout has a completely different setting, based in a medieval fantasy world with different characters - gameplay remains similar, however. It’s fairly standard fare for the genre, having the player pick from four archetypal fantasy heroes (Slash the fighter, Luna the dancer, Axel the warrior, and Kamui the ninja), and fight gangs of monsters in standard (though very nicely rendered) fantasy locations.
There’s a little bit of RPG flavour, too, as collecting gems gives experience points with which you use to level up, though levelling only seems to refill and slightly extend your life bar, so it’s really just a different way of providing the extra lives at certain score intervals which traditional beat-’em-ups often have.
The Fantastic Four video game, released in 1997 for the PlayStation, is a beat 'em-up action game based on the Marvel Comics superhero team. Developed by Probe Entertainment and published by Acclaim Entertainment, the game features playable characters Mr. Fantastic, The Invisible Woman, The Human Torch, The Thing, and She-Hulk, each with unique abilities. A version for the Sega Saturn was planned but ultimately cancelled. Players engage in combat, solve puzzles, and navigate obstacles across various levels, drawing from the rich lore of the Fantastic Four comics.
In this Special Edition exclusive Japanese release, included with this game are all the DLCs:
- 30 VR Missions
- Jetstream content
- Bladewolf content
- Wood Katana weapon
- Five costumes for Raiden (including the MGS4 Raiden and Grey Fox costume)
- Metal Gear Rising theme