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Post by Professor Fandango on Feb 28, 2004 12:43:05 GMT -5
Maybe Shinsei could tell you.
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Post by fantomet on Sept 20, 2004 19:34:46 GMT -5
About the Star Wars game, I know Rebel Assault 2 was like that. For it's time, it was kind of cool. Tomorrow, I'm going to get Star Wars: Battlefront. I hear it sucks, but I'm Lucas's bitch.
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Harbinger
New Member
Vely please, sil...
Posts: 34
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Post by Harbinger on Sept 28, 2004 16:20:27 GMT -5
Whatever you do, don't fall to the death-trap of Galactic Battlegrounds. What a crap waste of time.
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Post by Pjalne on Sept 28, 2004 21:45:27 GMT -5
Is that the one that's a lot like C&C? Where Qui-Gon Jinn is helping Chewie's porn-addict father win a tribal war in the first mission or something? I If so, I played it up until I was half-way into the Gungan campain and had had quite enough of Gungans.
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Post by fantomet on Sept 30, 2004 21:25:02 GMT -5
You know, that really does prove bukkake's not just a Japanese thing.
Germans and Wookiees like it, too.
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Post by Pjalne on Oct 1, 2004 7:42:45 GMT -5
Oh man, must be a bitch getting all that stuff out of the fur
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Post by L. Adam Bell on Jan 19, 2005 1:02:02 GMT -5
Thanks for that picture, PJ. You just made God cry.
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Post by Pjalne on Jan 19, 2005 8:03:03 GMT -5
I don't remember posting that, I'm shocked my own self.
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Post by jfritzyb on Feb 23, 2005 16:27:44 GMT -5
Hey folks! I was remembering if anyone knows about this game:
In this game, you played a red-headed man. I remember that a lion chased you in the first level. Later on, you faught tall, muscular bald-headed men.
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Post by L. Adam Bell on Mar 8, 2005 0:21:25 GMT -5
I believe you're talking about "Out of This World," for the SNES and Genesis. It had great cutscenes, but the game's controls were clunky and slow. It reminded me of a sci-fi version of Prince of Persia.
- R.
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Post by jfritzyb on Mar 9, 2005 16:44:20 GMT -5
Yeah, you're right...I played the DOS version though...Kinda puny compared to the SEGA CD version--even more cool when I could play the SEGA CD version on my computer....
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Post by Northlander on Mar 10, 2005 6:28:55 GMT -5
If I remember correctly, the Sega CD version contained both "Out of this world" and "Heart of the ...." er, "alien", I think; a sort of pseudo-sequel which put you in the role of your alien ally and let you play the game taking place at the same timeline as "Out of this world".
Gotta love emulation. ;D
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Post by jfritzyb on Apr 8, 2005 0:52:50 GMT -5
Hey, I need some help here...
I remember playing a game when I was a kid...Unfortunately, I don't remember the title...Anyways, another thing that might help is the fact that I played this game on a black and white computer (that means that the computer didn't have any graphics color at ALL!)
I think it was an older model of Windows...Anyway, the game goes something like this....You are some sort of "animal" that moves around in correspondence with whichever arrow key you press. Your goal is to eat baby tadpoles (represented by a bubble with a tiny dot in the middle of it.) If you waited too long, the froggies would grow up and they would swim all over the place! You then had to avoid them as much as possible.
I don't remember if you had to eat all the tadpoles up or not but somehow and someway, you had to eventually find the exit--located at various corners of the screen (or something like that). Anyways, (and this might help a little bit more), when I was about five or seven, we gave a copy of the game to a friend and I watched my friend play it....Now, concerning the graphics, I would have to say that...
(a.) The game had CGA graphics. or... (b.) You chose whether you wanted a CGA, VGA, or Tandy graphics card (similar to the way the computer game "Batman the Movie" starts out....)
...Finally, for some odd reason, my dad and I had a habit of calling the game "Diggery." I did a websearch on that--didn't find anything. Anyways, just hoping that maybe one of you guys might figure out what I'm talking about....I was born in 1987. We got our first computer in 1995, '96--and like I said before, the computer only had a black and white graphics card....oh, and the game was already installed on the computer--alongside Captain Dynamo!
--Joe
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Post by jfritzyb on Apr 11, 2005 8:29:41 GMT -5
Sorry guys....It was Diggory....(Note the "o")
Still need someone to tell me what it's all about--that is, if ANYONE knows.....
Oh hey...I got a lead on it, I think....Just MAYBE, it might have been installed on those old Ms-Dos 4.0 computers...Unsure...
Another develpment....Those bubbles with dots in them? They are grubs. If not eaten for a period of time, they would morphe into tadpoles.
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Post by jfritzyb on Apr 18, 2005 19:31:01 GMT -5
Never mind, folks....I found that game.... SCENARIO...Diggory is a sort of mole-like creature that lives underground on a diet of magic mushrooms and doombug eggs. She has become trapped in the doombugs' caves and must escape. The caves are infested with doombug eggs, which creep about looking for other eggs. When two eggs meet, a grub is formed. When two grubs meet, a fully grown bug is formed. The grubs will try to eat Diggory's mushroom supply, thus preventing her escape. The bugs will try to eat Diggory! TECHNIQUE...Diggory can only escape from a cave by eating a mushroom and charging head-first at the gate. She must do this eight times for each gate. In the meantime, she must eat as many eggs as she can to stop grubs and bugs from being created. She must also keep a watch on her air supply: if this runs out she's done for! On escaping from a cave, she will enter a bug-infested passage, from which she can only escape by collecting a magic key. In seemingly impossible situations in the passages, it is often advantageous for Diggory to lure the bugs towards herself before making a run for it. CONTROLS...Simplicity itself - , ,[UP],[DOWN] cursor keys. Quit at any time by hitting [ESC] (great if your'e playing the game in the office!). At the start, set the speed of play with and keys; start game with [UP] or [DOWN]. Speed 2 is about right for an eight-MHz 8086 machine (e.g. Amstrad 1512/1640); speed 1 should do for a 4.77-MHz 8088/8086; slower speeds are for rich b*ggers with 80286, 80386 or even 80486 machines.
NOTE that DIGGORY.DTA must be in the same directory as the program.
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