You play as a young hero named Nash who is tasked with stopping a dark wizard from using the Lucifer Rings that will open the gates of Hell. Naturally, Nash will have to hack and slash his way through Centaurs, Goblins, Dragons and creatures named Bob to put a stop to the evil forces. There will be mini-bosses and multi-state level bosses to round out this adventure to put our hero to the test.
Dark wizards never let heroes get any rest, do they?
Battle Insects Den is a strategy role-playing game for the PlayStation and was released by Jaleco in 1999.
The game progresses through a series of strategy and adventure parts.
In the strategy part, the player controls an allied insect on a battle stage that resembles a chessboard, and when it comes into contact with an enemy insect, the game shifts to a command-selectable battle.
In the adventure part, the player controls the main character on the overlooking map, talking with other characters and shopping.
You can also connect your PocketStation to play mini-games and bring the items you obtain into the main game.
Each of the three discs is available for the first, second and third semesters, and you can play through to the end of the game without having to replace the disc. Each semester, the characters, events and opening movies are different versions.
It is a sequel that continues the concept of the previous work and attempts to enrich the content. The player becomes a second-year student at Aobadai High School and aims to create a girlfriend in about a month before transferring to another school. The theme is "preciousness".
At the start of the play, you select three keywords, the semester, the main character's ability tendency. The ability tendency is linked with the preference of the target character, and changes the rising curve of appearance event, friendliness and admiration. Keywords can be used as your favorite topic when you have a conversation on your way home from school, and their response also changes depending on your partner's preference.
An enhanced port of Snowboard Kids released exclusively in Japan which featured four new characters among other improvements to the Nintendo 64 original
Just like its predecessors Need for Speed: High Stakes is an action racing game with a wide selection of exotic sports cars and many different types of tracks. The trademark Hot Pursuit mode game mode from the first game in the series is still present, where players race opponents on tracks filled with regular traffic and police cars that chase the racers. The classic pursuit mode is extended with two additional modes: Getaway and Time Trap. In Getaway the player needs to shake off the police in a set amount of time, or playing as the police trap a speeder before time runs out. In Time Trap an entire race needs to be completed before time runs out, or as the police all speeders need to be arrested. There are minor differences between the two platforms for this game mode, regarding spike strips, road blocks, and back-up. The latter for instance is unique to the PlayStation version. The Pursuit mode is available in multiplayer as well and players can take different sides or race together.
It is the first game in the
Evil Zone or Eretzvaju (封神領域エルツヴァーユ Fūjin Ryōiki Erutsuvāyu) is a fighting game released for the PlayStation console. It was developed by Yuke's Future Media Creators and published by Titus Software in 1999. The player can choose from ten characters to fight in several game modes including story mode, arcade mode, versus mode, practice and survival mode.
The story mode is a unique aspect to the game and sets it apart from other fighting games. Each character has a unique story mode which progresses like an ongoing television program, complete with episode names and previews with voice acting. As the mode progresses, you learn more about the character's backstory and why they are fighting, an incentive to play through the game with each character. Evil Zone is also one of the few games to feature a fully fleshed out story mode for its boss character.
The Popular manga Initial D, appeared in the PS. Utilizing a digital comic movies and reproduce the world of the original. The pile driving, Ekusutorabatoru partners may change after ending, full of narrow elements appear to do courses such as cars and hidden hidden. Driving with the sea and became a high school student Takumi's amazing, let's break the notorious race shop.
The Incredible Coneman is a maze chase game developed by Lars Barstad and Per Ivar Pedersen unique for its 3d graphics, its death sound, and the three-second bass melody that loops infinitely. It was originally featured in issue 32 of the PSX 'Exclusive Demos' series and made using the Net Yaroze development kit.
Max Power Racing is a racing simulation game. It is licensed by the UK magazine Max Power. It features cars from various manufacturers. It features 31 tracks across 11 countries from all over the world, featuring cities, mountain roads as well as off-road tracks. You can play in arcade mode (to unlock tracks), player mode and championship mode. Player mode allows you to play against a friend or set personal records and in championship mode you play through all tracks. There are four difficulties to select from in the championship mode. You start with the lowest, but finishing first gains you points with which you can unlock the other difficulties and new and better cars to race with.
Taking the nature of virtual pets to an altogether deeper level, Pet in TV lets you raise an artificial pet (P.I.T.), train it to obey you, feed and pamper it, and teach it everything it needs to know about its new virtual world.
Though the P.I.T.'s outward appearance is akin to a robotic motorised egg, with the right nurturing it can grow and become more intelligent just like a real pet. Once it is fully trained, your P.I.T. can then explore its virtual world in search of valuable AI-chips that can later be used to build the ultimate Gold P.I.T. pet.
Each P.I.T. has its own personality, which you can choose before it is "born"; cheeky ones tend to be more adventurous, quiet ones more obedient - the choice of P.I.T. personality governs just how you and your P.I.T. will get along!
A PS1 RPG with 3-D models and pre-rendered backdrops, Ancient Roman was released in 1998 by Nihon System, but exploded into internet infamy in the late 2010s as word of the game began to spread through Japanese gaming circles. It is now widely considered to be one of the worst RPGs ever made by Japanese retro gamers.
In a hellish mechanical future, the latest generation of robots are fighting a self-destructive war of attrition. Command your war machine in the hyper realistic 3D worlds. Power up your weapons. 15 missions and only one way to survive: destroy the enemy.