Space Taxi
Airborne Ranger
Impossible Mission
Maniac Mansion
A game I can't remember the name of, but you drove around a city and went to drug stores and I don't remember why. Havent been able to find it, played it as a kid.
Looked up a vid of this, unfortunately no. The city was like night time from what I remember. And you definitely went to "drug stores" for something, maybe to heal or something.
Yeah i looked at the vid, it's not it, unless my memory is bad, this was over 30 years ago, but I don't remember the side scrolling portions at all, it was all car.
The only other game with free driving around a city I can think of is Turbo Esprit which I think had a crappy conversion on the C64, but I don't remember going into buildings in it
6 months ago
Anonymous
Appreciate the help, that's not it, it was top down like Miami Vice, but I swear it was a night time city. Gonna ask my brother next time I see him if it was Miami Vice, maybe my memory is just that bad.
A number of things wrong with this hilarious comparison:
-NES ports make up less than 0.01% of the C64's titles.
-C64's best games weren't even available for NES
-C64 had better sprites and sound than the NES, so graphics were usually better
-There were more good C64 games ported to the NES that ended up being shit than the reverse
Space Taxi
Airborne Ranger
Impossible Mission
Maniac Mansion
A game I can't remember the name of, but you drove around a city and went to drug stores and I don't remember why. Havent been able to find it, played it as a kid.
Oh and Aliens.
Miami Vice by any chance?
Looked up a vid of this, unfortunately no. The city was like night time from what I remember. And you definitely went to "drug stores" for something, maybe to heal or something.
You go to "drug stores" in Miami Vice, too...
Yeah i looked at the vid, it's not it, unless my memory is bad, this was over 30 years ago, but I don't remember the side scrolling portions at all, it was all car.
The only other game with free driving around a city I can think of is Turbo Esprit which I think had a crappy conversion on the C64, but I don't remember going into buildings in it
Appreciate the help, that's not it, it was top down like Miami Vice, but I swear it was a night time city. Gonna ask my brother next time I see him if it was Miami Vice, maybe my memory is just that bad.
Wizball. The game is bullshit before you get the second powerup, but afterwards it is sublime.
the NES version was better, even Ron Gilbert said it was the definitive version of the game
Source for that? Since I would find it hard to believe that he called that downgraded, censored, truncated piece of shit the "definitive" version.
The only superior thing about it is you didn't need to swap floppies.
Red Storm Rising
Oi, me Comigger 64! Where the best games are titles Atari 2600 fanboys would be ashamed to like. I sure love inferior ports of NES games.
>inferior ports of NES games
A number of things wrong with this hilarious comparison:
-NES ports make up less than 0.01% of the C64's titles.
-C64's best games weren't even available for NES
-C64 had better sprites and sound than the NES, so graphics were usually better
-There were more good C64 games ported to the NES that ended up being shit than the reverse
don't feed the troll dipshit
>don't feed the troll dipshit
Don't feed the troll, dipshit.
Back to school with you.
Castles of Doctor Creep
Pitfall II
Bruce Lee
Bubble Bobble
Archon
Paradroid
Microprose Soccer
Delta, for shoot em up goodness.
Raid Over Moscow
Impossible Mission 1&2
Below The Root
Toy Bizarre
Space Taxi
Strip Poker
Paperboy
I only play games with 4 legged animals.
The Atari 8-bit version has better framerate. Shame the 7800 port was cancelled, it would've been the best version of the game.
Knock knock knock!
Knock..knock..knock!
Knock.....knock........knock.
It's the Ace!
First played this on the Amiga 2000. Along with Lemmings and Wild Wheels (the source original Rocket League is based on). Good times!
>American computer
>all the best C64 games were made by the Bongs
explain this
European gamers in the '80s cared more about micro computers than consoles.