Street Racer Game Review (1994, SNES) – A Mario Kart Beater?
Introducing a kart racer that not only borrows elements from Nintendo’s ever-popular Super Mario Kart, but also a few parts of other racers and non-racing games.
Introducing a kart racer that not only borrows elements from Nintendo’s ever-popular Super Mario Kart, but also a few parts of other racers and non-racing games.
Have you ever stopped to ask yourself if you could play one of the arcade’s biggest hits on your Game Boy screen, well [SHO-RYU-KEN]!
This week, you are going to see the second instalment of my quest to cover every single Super FX game ever released – Yes, you and I are about to take the wheel in Stunt Race FX.
Welcome to the first in a series of very special reviews, taking a look at every single playable Super FX game. Of course, the most logical place to start would be with the very first game to use the Super FX chip – Starfox.
He may be little more than a really funny Twitter account these days, but there’s some real hope at the moment the Sonic The Hedgehog might well return to glory in the very near future. But let’s cast our minds back to a time when he was a true rival to Super Mario.
Capcom knew how to milk a franchise dry, back in the day, didn’t they? After all, how many versions of Street Fighter II were there? When it came to the once-popular Mega Man series, it took six, yes, six instalments on the Nintendo Entertainment System, before Capcom finally decided that the Blue Bomber’s time on …
Melon Bread. Seven Force. Pinky Roader. These seem like random words to many, but to players of a certain Mega Drive game, they’re some of the greatest bosses ever seen in video games. And they return in the game I’m about to review: Gunstar Future Heroes.
Dungeon Punks is a combination of Golden Axe, Dragon’s Crown, Dark Souls, and many classic scrolling brawlers from yesterday – but is it any good? Find out right now, in my review.
There was a time when the world saw the entire nation of Japan as a land filled with crazy people that do incredibly silly things for entertainment. We’ve all seen clips of Takeshi’s Castle and other incredibly odd Japanese television shows, and we’ve probably all come to that conclusion as well. When a game like …
At one end of the scale, Soft Body puts you in that serene, almost meditative frame of mind, as the combination of calming analogue soundscapes and abstract visuals cause your mind to melt into a zen-like trance. Then there’s the other side that flips a switch and puts you into survival mode as you are …