Rej72380's forum posts

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Rej72380

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#1 Rej72380
Member since 2003 • 545 Posts
Out of the ones I've played in the last five years, I would go with The Legend of Dragoon. 117 hours of role-playing bliss, spanning four CD-ROMs.
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Rej72380

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#2 Rej72380
Member since 2003 • 545 Posts
I would have to go with the 5.825 Million point run on the Atari 5200 version of Defender and the 25-Minute Richter speed run for Castlevania: Symphony of the Night, both of which are verified Twin Galaxies world records.
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Rej72380

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#3 Rej72380
Member since 2003 • 545 Posts

That teamwork is the ultimate key to success.

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Rej72380

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#4 Rej72380
Member since 2003 • 545 Posts

***SPOILERS***

The one from The Legend of Zelda: Ocarina of Time,

[spoiler] where it was revealed that the male Sheik was indeed Princess Zelda, under a spell of magic to hide her true identity. [/spoiler]

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Rej72380

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#5 Rej72380
Member since 2003 • 545 Posts
You know, you can buy a slim-model PS2 for only $130 and replace the old PS2.
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Rej72380

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#6 Rej72380
Member since 2003 • 545 Posts
I'm surprised no one has mentioned the ever-popular ShadowRun.
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Rej72380

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#7 Rej72380
Member since 2003 • 545 Posts

Yah it was the closest to the pc version in sound and levels. Graphics aren''t that good though. It did have and online feature if you used X-band or something like that

Videogamefan123

You got the name of the SNES online service right off the bat. XBand was an online multiplayer service for the SNES and Sega Genesis that allowed you to play against other people online, by means of a dial-up modem in the form of an SNES or Genesis cartridge. The SNES version of Doom was one of the rare single player-only titles that supported XBand.

Sadly, XBand is no longer in service, as of 1997.

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Rej72380

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#8 Rej72380
Member since 2003 • 545 Posts
For your dad, TC, I would get him a copy of Boxxle, which has a simple concept of pushing crates to their desired places. Also note that in Boxxle, you can play it at a leisurely pace, meaning that neither you nor your dad will be pressured to finish the 100 puzzles the game has to offer.
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Rej72380

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#9 Rej72380
Member since 2003 • 545 Posts

TC, what actually caused this complete save file meltdown was that cheat devices were used on the actual copies of the game have were save along with the progress and Monster Medal counts. This caused the coding in the game cartridge to be permanently altered, thus causing the corrupted save data and glitchy Monster Medal lists.

Personally, I'm very fortunate to have my save data intact.

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Rej72380

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#10 Rej72380
Member since 2003 • 545 Posts
IMHO, Mega Man III was a top-tier title in the series, as it pushed the graphical capabilities of the NES to it's limit, by having detailed backgrounds, realisitic-looking ladders and transistion screens fading to black, as opposed of the first two Mega Man titles completely refreshing the screen like a web browser.