Hyper Crazy Climber

Hyper Crazy ClimberThe Game: You’re crazy-climbing the inner city no more. As one of a party of three adventurers, your mission is to scale mystic mountain peaks, Big Ben-style clock towers, and even enormous beanstalks, all to gather various items and move on to the next stop on your quest. Obstacles such as an avalanche of killer boulders and monkeys tossing bananas at you could send you plummeting to your death. The three characters along for the adventure have different rates of speed and endurance (as in endurance for things falling on their heads, though nothing will save you from a huge boulder). Watch out for falling rocks! (Nichibutsu, 1996)

Memories: This is one fiendishly difficult game. Normally, when I put together a Phosphor Dot Fossil, I play to get as far as I can in the game so you can get a glimpse of as many levels as possible. Not everyone reading this has all of these games, so I try to show you everything that I can. (Read more about this game…)

Hyper Crazy Climber review written by Earl Green / review, photographs and video presentations are © by Earl Green and by theLogbook.com and may not be reproduced without permission. Contact us for reprint permission or licensing information on theLogBook.com original material. Hyper Crazy Climber is filed under the categories: Nichibutsu, D-Pad, H, ...at home, Playstation, 1996, 4 quarters (4 stars), Retro Remakes, Japanese Import, Climbing, More Than 2 Buttons, Game System

Namco Museum Volume 4 (”C”)

Namco Museum Volume 4Buy this gameThe Game: Namco has even more games they’d like us all to remember, only this time, you might not remember them half as clearly as Pac-Man, who’s still dragging you through the halls of the Namco Museum, eager to play each and every one. Oddly enough, you’ve probably never seen any of these games before. The greatest challenge in your path in Volume 4? Figuring out the controls for The Genji And The Heike Clans and Return of Ishtar. (Namco, 1996)

Memories: Personally, I don’t remember any of these games, save for the bizarre scrolling exploration game Pac-Land and Assault, which I believe was licensed to Atari. Inspired by the ABC-TV cartoon series, Pac-Land may indeed be the only reason anyone might now try to track down the now out-of-print Volume 4 of Namco Museum. (Read more about this game…)

Namco Museum Volume 4 (”C”) review written by Earl Green / review, photographs and video presentations are © by Earl Green and by theLogbook.com and may not be reproduced without permission. Contact us for reprint permission or licensing information on theLogBook.com original material. Namco Museum Volume 4 (”C”) is filed under the categories: Available In Our Store, Side-Scrolling, N, Action Adventure, ...at home, Playstation, home video games only, Namco, D-Pad, Shooting At Enemies, Retro Compilations, Collecting Objects, More Than 2 Buttons, 1996, 3 quarters (3 stars), Game System

Namco Museum Volume 5 (”O”)

Namco Museum Volume 5Buy this gameThe Game: The Namco Museum is open for business one last time! Today’s exhibit features games of the late 1980s, and of course Pac-Man - being the prideful little single-celled organism that he is - simply must see all the displays. You wander the halls one last time, visiting some really cool themed rooms for each game, with the yellow one underfoot. Games included this time around are Metro-Cross, Pac-Mania, Dragon Spirit, The Legend of Valkyrie and Baraduke. (Namco, 1996)

Memories: For the final installment of their series of classic arcade emulations, Namco mined their late-80s games, concentrating on fighting and quest games primarily. The only relatively simple title included on Volume 5 (a.k.a. Volume O) is the final arcade appearance of Pac-Man in Pac-Mania, a very simple updating of the original Pac-Man set in a vaguely Zaxxon-esque three-quarter perspective. In a way, Pac-Mania is the direct predecessor of the 3-D “maze mode” of Namco’s recent retro revival Pac-Man World. (Read more about this game…)

Namco Museum Volume 5 (”O”) review written by Earl Green / review, photographs and video presentations are © by Earl Green and by theLogbook.com and may not be reproduced without permission. Contact us for reprint permission or licensing information on theLogBook.com original material. Namco Museum Volume 5 (”O”) is filed under the categories: Available In Our Store, Side-Scrolling, N, Action Adventure, ...at home, Playstation, home video games only, Fighting, Namco, D-Pad, Shooting At Enemies, Maze, Retro Compilations, More Than 2 Buttons, 4 quarters (4 stars), Isometric View, 1996, Game System

Tempest X3

Tempest X3Buy this gameThe Game: As in the original Tempest, you scuttle along the rim of an abstract, hollow geometric tube as a strangely crablike creature, zapping red bow-tie-ish critters and purple diamond-shaped things which carry them. There are also swirly green things (swirly thing alert!!) which spin “spikes” like webs, and by the way, you should still avoid spikes. (Interplay, 1996)

See the videoMemories: My first reaction to Tempest X3 was “DUDE!” And that’s not even a “Dude! It sucks!” or “Dude! It rules!” Nope, it’s just a “Dude! What gnarly graphics!” This is kind of like the original Tempest, except psychedelically tie-dyed. To put it mildly, it’s a very…colorful updating of the game. The tube walls now have colorful (if subtle) patterns, and power-ups are hailed by more lens flares than an early episode of Babylon 5. (Read more about this game…)

Tempest X3 review written by Earl Green / review, photographs and video presentations are © by Earl Green and by theLogbook.com and may not be reproduced without permission. Contact us for reprint permission or licensing information on theLogBook.com original material. Tempest X3 is filed under the categories: D-Pad, T, ...at home, Playstation, 1996, 3 quarters (3 stars), Retro Remakes, Shooting At Enemies, More Than 2 Buttons, Game System

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