Casual_Critic01
Joined Sep 2023
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Ratings28
Casual_Critic01's rating
Reviews20
Casual_Critic01's rating
NFL's Greatest: San Francisco vs Dallas is a 1993 sports game on the Sega Cd. This was one of five football games released on the Sega cd. The primary game revolves around selecting plays and then having the video scoreboard play out an NFL clip of the result. You can only play as one of the two teams.
Gameplay: 1 out of 5 primarily the gameplay is very basic and barebones. Even for being a now retro game. Honestly it can get old and boring real quick without any real variety to keep it somewhat entertaining.
Entertainment value: 2 out of 5 In my honest opinion, if the developers of this game had made this an actual full NFL game, I think the overall entertainment value would have been a little better. Granted I know the Sega Cd system and the Cds the games were made on didn't have all the space in the world, but having some more options would not have been a bad thing.
Overall when you break it down, the game doesn't have really what it needs to in order to be an actual game. You somewhat have the illusion of picking plays and it spits out a random video clip. I'm sure some that bought this at its full value price were a little unhappy because more or less your just watching old NFL video clips in different sequences.
Gameplay: 1 out of 5 primarily the gameplay is very basic and barebones. Even for being a now retro game. Honestly it can get old and boring real quick without any real variety to keep it somewhat entertaining.
Entertainment value: 2 out of 5 In my honest opinion, if the developers of this game had made this an actual full NFL game, I think the overall entertainment value would have been a little better. Granted I know the Sega Cd system and the Cds the games were made on didn't have all the space in the world, but having some more options would not have been a bad thing.
Overall when you break it down, the game doesn't have really what it needs to in order to be an actual game. You somewhat have the illusion of picking plays and it spits out a random video clip. I'm sure some that bought this at its full value price were a little unhappy because more or less your just watching old NFL video clips in different sequences.
Sewer Shark takes place sometime in the future, where environmental destruction has forced most of humanity to live underground. The player takes the role of a rookie pilot in a band of "sewer jockies", whose job is to exterminate dangerous mutated creatures to keep a vast network of sewers clean for the resort area "Solar City", an island paradise ruled by the evil Commissioner Stenchler. The player's co-pilot, Ghost evaluates the player's performance throughout the game, while a small robot named Catfish scouts ahead and gives directions. The player is later assisted by Falco, a female jockey who believes that there is a hidden route to the surface.
Sewer Shark wasn't originally made for the Sega CD in the first place. It was originally made for a system that used VHS tapes instead of cartridges or CDs. Hasbro, who developed the system, decided to drop the idea, may be for money reasons, or something else. So when the time came to release the Sega CD in the U. S, Sega probably decided to release this game as a launch game because it featured FMV and Sega wanted to show how powerful the Sega CD was through FMV. Thus, Sega bought the rights for it and published it under Sony.
Tom Zito, the president of Digital Pictures, said the game's development costs were $3 million.
Sewer Shark wasn't originally made for the Sega CD in the first place. It was originally made for a system that used VHS tapes instead of cartridges or CDs. Hasbro, who developed the system, decided to drop the idea, may be for money reasons, or something else. So when the time came to release the Sega CD in the U. S, Sega probably decided to release this game as a launch game because it featured FMV and Sega wanted to show how powerful the Sega CD was through FMV. Thus, Sega bought the rights for it and published it under Sony.
Tom Zito, the president of Digital Pictures, said the game's development costs were $3 million.
Assault on Precinct 13 is a 1976 action thriller film written, directed, and scored by John Carpenter. Lieutenant Ethan Bishop, a newly promoted highway patrol officer, is assigned to take charge of the decommissioned Anderson police precinct during the last few hours before it is permanently closed. Only a skeleton staff remains, including Sergeant Chaney and the station's two secretaries, Leigh and Julie. A prison bus arrives seeking medical help for one of three men being transported to the state penitentiary: Napoleon Wilson, a convicted murderer; Wells; and Caudell, who is sick. Across town, the Street Thunder warlords drive around looking for people to kill. One of the warlords fatally shoots a little girl, Kathy, and the driver of an ice cream van. Kathy's father, Lawson, pursues and kills the warlord before other gang members chase him into the Anderson precinct. In shock, Lawson is unable to communicate what has happened to him. Now with the gang trying to make their way in, it's up to the ones inside to not only defend it, but each other.