Mobile Games Alt Costumes!
list and refs of different characters costumes from Sonic Forces: Speed Battle, and Sonic Dash. Because I want to be able to look at them all in one place
Pirate Sonic (SD)
Elf Classic Sonic (SD/SFSB)
Sluger Sonic (SD/SFSB)
Snowdrift Sonic (SD/SFSB)
Dragonfire Sonic (SD/SFSB)
Jester Sonic (SD/SFSB)
Dragonclaw Tails (SD/SFSB)
Paladin Amy (SD/SFSB)
Allstar Amy (SD/SFSB)
Jingle Belle Amy (SD/SFSB)
Popstar Amy (SD/SFSB)
Panda Amy (SD/SFSB)
Treasure Hunter Knuckles (SD/SFSB)
Mummy Knuckles (SD/SFSB)
Captain Shadow (SD)
Vampire Shadow (SD/SFSB)
Dragon Hunter Lancelot (SD/SFSB)
Chrono Silver (SD/SFSB)
Nutcracker Silver (SD/SFSB)
Lantern Silver (SFSB)
Rockstar Rouge (SD/SFSB)
Elite Agent Rouge (SD/SFSB)
Valentine Rouge (SD/SFSB)
Witch Rouge (SD/SFSB)
Unicorn Cream (SD/SFSB)
Spring Cream (SFSB)
theres a 30 picture post limit so thats it for now. I might make another post but i dont really care enough about the other characters to do All Of That so 🤷 tumblr posts is not the best place for archiving things, the formatting sucks
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Now that we're emulating game consoles this year instead of paying giant corporations for the privilege, here's 15 games each for the major consoles throughout time that you can use as a starting point.
Atari 2600.
The Atari Video Computer System (more commonly, Atari 2600) is the system that both began and almost destroyed the videogame industry. "ET the Extraterrestrial" will not be on this list for obvious reasons. Also, remember; this is your grandpa's game console, so don't expect much from the graphics or sounds. But, standing as a testament to the staying power of gameplay over visuals, each of these games have uncommonly high replay value.
1. Adventure
2. Asteroids
3. Bank Heist
4. Beamrider
5. Centipede
6. Chopper Command
7. Dragonfire
8. Fatal Run
9. Frogger
10. Galaxian
11. Gangster Alley
12. H.E.R.O.
13. Laser Gates
14. Pitfall
15. Yars' Revenge.
NES.
Nintendo is the worst offender when it comes to making people buy their old games several different times. So this, in combination with the fact Nintendo have the most game consoles of any of the hardware makers, means we're going to focus a lot of our time with them. Let's begin at the beginning, then, shall we?
1. The Battle for Olympus
2. Blaster Master
3. Castlevania
4. Contra
5. Donkey Kong
6. Earthbound Beginnings
7. Final Fantasy
8. The Legend of Zelda
9. Mario Bros.
10. Metroid
11. Pac-Man
12. Paperboy
13. Pinball
14. Rad Racer II
15. Tetris.
There were three versions of Tetris released for the NES (well, one for Famicom, two for NES); the first was for Famicom by Bullet Proof Software, the second was for NES by Tengen (alternate name for Atari), the third was the officially-licensed version by Nintendo for NES. The Tengen version is better than the Nintendo version and whatever BPS was trying to do.
Super NES.
My personal favourite game console, most of the best games for this platform are stuck in Copyright Hell and aren't likely to be officially re-released anywhere again.
1. Aero the AcroBat 2
2. Asterix & Obelix
3. Blackthorne
4. Donkey Kong Country
5. Donkey Kong Country 2: Diddy's Kongquest
6. Earthbound
7. Earthworm Jim
8. Final Fantasy IV
9. The Legend of Zelda: A Link to the Past
10. Prince of Persia
11. Soul Blazer
12. Super Castlevania IV
13. Super Mario All-Stars + Super Mario World
14. Super Mario RPG: Legend of the Seven Stars
15. Super Tetris 3.
Nintendo 64.
There really aren't all that many good games for this platform that weren't made by Nintendo or one of their second-party developers because the hardware was really sketchy and no one really knew what Nintendo meant when they said "Make us some new and groundbreaking games please." So, the list is unfairly skewed toward Nintendo and Rare for that reason.
1. 007 The World is Not Enough
2. Banjo Kazooie
3. Banjo Tooie
4. Cruis'n World
5. Doom 64
6. GoldenEye 007
7. The Legend of Zelda: Ocarina of Time
8. Mario Kart 64
9. Paper Mario<
10. Perfect Dark
11. Quake 64
12. Rayman 2: The Great Escape
13. StarFox 64/Lylat Wars
14. Super Mario 64
15. Yoshi's Story.
GameCube.
Now we're getting into "gaming computer" territory. If your computer doesn't have a video card from at least 2013 in it, don't expect these to run acceptably. The plus side is, this is as new as we're going to get, release date wise.
1. 007 Everything or Nothing
2. Animal Crossing
3. Crash Bandicoot: The Wrath of Cortex
4. Harvest Moon: Magical Melody
5. The Legend of Zelda: Twilight Princess
6. The Legend of Zelda: The Wind Waker
7. The Lord of the Rings: The Two Towers
8. Mario Kart Double Dash
9. The Sims 2
10. Sonic Adventure DX
11. Soul Calibur II
12. Super Mario Sunshine
13. Super Monkey Ball
14. Super Smash Bros. Melee
15. Tomb Raider Legend.
I have a bit of a dilemma here-- "do I recommend any Harry Potter games?" On one hand, Chamber of Secrets on GCN was my favourite game as a kid and JoKeR was not involved in its production in any way except for inventing the canon upon which it was based; but on the other hand, it's still JoKeR's intellectual real-estate in your own brain. I mean, it IS piracy, and it benefits no one except the player, and believe me when I say that the visuals, sounds, and gameplay of the 6th-Gen HP games was absolutely high-art, and you can literally just wander around Hogwarts for hours not doing anything but raiding desks for jellybeans and stink pellets. I'm going to leave it up to you.
Wii.
The Wii is a little problematic because of its motion controls. Since connecting a Wii Remote to your computer can be time consuming and may not work at all, this list only contains games that can be played with a gamepad, either the GCN controller or a Classic Controller attachment. Obviously, some enterprising spud with a compiler can probably hack the more popular Wii games to use traditional control, but we won't be counting on that here.
1. Castlevania: The Adventure ReBirth
2. Cave Story
3. Contra ReBirth
4. Fire Emblem: Radiant Dawn
5. GoldenEye 007
6. Gradius ReBirth
7. Harvest Moon: Tree of Tranquility
8. Klonoa
9. Mario Kart Wii
10. Nights: Journey of Dreams
11. Pitfall: The Big Adventure
12. Rayman Origins
13. Sonic Colors
14. Sonic Unleashed
15. Super Smash Bros. Brawl.
Game Boy & Game Boy Color.
Nintendo is pretty much the last holdout against mobile phones when it comes to portable gaming systems mostly because of the Game Boy line. I recommend playing GB and GBC games on phones (ironically) because the pixels will be less the size of canned hams as opposed to a large gaming monitor.
1. Alleyway
2. Batman: The Video Game
3. Castlevania: The Adventure
4. Contra III: Alien Wars
5. Donkey Kong
6. Game & Watch Gallery 2 (GB Color)<br>
7. Kirby's Dream Land
8. The Legend of Zelda: Link's Awakening DX (GB Color)
9. Pokemon Gold/Silver (GB Color)
10. Shantae (GB Color)
11. Super Mario Bros. Deluxe (GB Color)
12. Super Mario Land
13. Super Mario Land 2: 6 Golden Coins
14. Tetris
15. Wario Land.
Game Boy Advance.
Everything the 32-bit consoles of the '90s should have been, the GBA has an impressive roster of excellent games, and choosing just 15 of them was really hard, actually. Critics tended to be overly-critical of GBA games, mostly because they were adult men and the GBA was seen as a toy.
1. Action Man: Robot Atak
2. Banjo Kazooie: Grunty's Revenge
3. Crash Bandicoot: The Huge Adventure
4. Dark Arena
5. Harvest Moon: Friends of Mineral Town
6. Inspector Gadget Advance Mission
7. Iridion 3D
8. Klonoa: Empire of Dreams
9. Lady Sia
10. The Legend of Zelda: The Minish Cap
11. Mario & Luigi: Superstar Saga
12. Mario Kart Super Circuit
13. Mario vs. Donkey Kong
14. The Sims: Bustin' Out
15. Super Mario Advance 4: Super Mario Bros. 3.
Sega Mega Drive/Genesis.
Unlike Nintendo's attempts to horn in on Sega's profits with overpriced emulations with crappy button mapping, this list contains primarily diamonds-in-the-rough and victims of Copyright Hell.
1. BOB
2. Castlevania: Bloodlines
3. Contra Hard Corps
4. Double Dragon
5. Earthworm Jim 2
6. Golden Axe
7. The Incredible Crash Dummies
8. James Bond 007: The Duel
9. Outlander
10. The Ren & Stimpy Show: Stimpy's Invention
11. Ristar
12. Shadow of the Beast
13. Sonic the Hedgehog
14. Sonic the Hedgehog 2
15. Toejam & Earl.
Sega Master System & Game Gear.
Technically, the Master System came before the Mega Drive, with the Game Gear happening afterwards. However, a little-known fact about the Game Gear is that it uses the exact same hardware as the Master System; therefore, Master System emulators can also play Game Gear games.
1. Alex Kidd in Miracle World
2. Asterix
3. Batman Returns
4. Ghost House
5. Impossible Mission
6. Kenseiden
7. King's Quest
8. Maze Hunter 3D
9. Montezuma's Revenge
10. Phantasy Star
11. Quest for the Shaven Yak starring Ren & Stimpy (GG)
12. Rastan (GG)
13. Rygar
14. Sonic Chaos
15. Wonder Boy.
Sony PlayStation.
The result of an aborted partnership with Nintendo, the only thing Sony has in common with them anymore is a liking for users to buy the same games several times.
1. Crash Bandicoot
2. Danger Girl
3. Doom
4. Duke Nukem: Time to Kill
5. Gex: Enter the Gecko
6. Glover
7. Klonoa
8. Lucky Luke
9. PowerSlave
10. Ray Tracers
11. Rayman
12. Spyro the Dragon
13. Tomb Raider 2
14. Tomorrow Never Dies
15. V-Rally '97.
Sega Saturn.
As anyone with a Saturn knew at the time, their console wasn't being very well-received and even intense crunch-time couldn't save Sonic X-Treme from cancellation. In general, most of the games released on Saturn were also released on other systems, where they tended to perform better. This list is only here for nostalgic purposes, and, with a few exceptions, all of these games can be played with better results on other systems.
1. Bug!
2. Bug Too!
3. Clockwork Knight 2
4. Daytona USA
5. Doom
6. Earthworm Jim 2
7. Gex
8. The Lost Vikings 2: Norse by Norse-West
9. Nights into Dreams
10. Rayman
11. Scud: The Disposable Assassin
12. SimCity 2000
13. Sonic 3D Blast
14. Sonic R
15. Virtua Racing.
While you should always use a VPN (Mozilla VPN is $5 a month), you don't need to worry about antivirus software here, because you can get literally all of these games from the Software Capsules Collection on Archive.org.
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