Faselei! Neo Geo Pocket Color 1999
seen from Canada

seen from France
seen from Australia
seen from United Arab Emirates
seen from China
seen from China
seen from United Kingdom
seen from Brazil

seen from Netherlands

seen from Germany
seen from China
seen from Israel
seen from China

seen from Malaysia
seen from United States
seen from Russia
seen from Japan

seen from Malaysia
seen from China
seen from Singapore
Faselei! Neo Geo Pocket Color 1999
Koudelka (1999)
Is it okay child? For you not to follow him?
Yeah, it's okay. I have a feeling that someday, somewhere we'll meet again.
Koudelka (2000) dev. Sacnoth
Boss battle clip (because the music is cool). They hit hard in this game. This one has an attack that narrows the hit areas on the judgement ring. Savage.
"Shadow Hearts" turns 23!
And here’s another gaming birthday! This time is the Shadow Hearts series! Yay! ▶︎ About the Series The first game in the Shadow Hearts series is set 15 years after the PlayStation game Koudelka. The story takes place in the Republic of China and various parts of Europe in 1913 and 1914. It features characters based on real people, such as Margaretha Geertruida MacLeod, Roger Bacon, and Yoshiko…
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Koudelka (1999)
Koudelka (1999)
Koudelka is a horror-themed role-playing video game developed by Sacnoth for the PlayStation. The game was published by SNK in Japan in 1999, and by Infogrames internationally in 2000. Set in the haunted Nemeton Monastery in Wales, the plot follows protagonists Koudelka Iasant, Edward Plunkett and Bishop James O'Flaherty as they uncover Nemeton's secrets and confront monsters created from its dark past. Its gameplay blends exploration and puzzle elements with turn-based battles waged on a grid.
Far from a favorite, Koudelka was the only Sacnoth game I have spent any meaningful amount of time playing. Although I found its combat sequences to be rather trite and exhausting, I was nevertheless able to appreciate some of its horror literature references and find value in its lasting visual themes. Most of all, I was taken aback by its exquisite and particularly influential introduction sequence, accompanied by an a capella theme composed by the great Hiroki Kikuta. All CGI work was commissioned to a then young and relatively unknown company, Digital Media Lab., today a true colossus of digital film production for some of Japan's most legendary TV shows, movies and games.