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Turok: Dinosaur Hunter (N64)
Accolade All Time Favourites Accolade (Artech Digital Entertainments; Sculptured Software; Distinctive Software; Mirrorsmiths) UK 1990
Console Sports Games of 1994 - Looney Tunes B-Ball
More basketball from 1994! This time, the Looney Tunes head to the court with Looney Tunes B-Ball. Looney Tunes B-Ball is a 2v2 arcade basketball game featuring Bugs Bunny, Daffy Duck, Elmer Fudd, Wile E. Coyote, Tasmanian Devil, Sylvester, Yosemite Sam, and Marvin Martian. It includes the usual array of basketball moves as well as special defensive and offensive moves.
Developed by Sculptured Software and published by Sun Corporation, Looney Tunes B-Ball was released in 1995 in the United States and exclusively for the SNES. A European release of the game followed in 1995.
Looney Tunes B-Ball is part of the extensive list of games developed using the Looney Tunes license. MobyGames lists 98 games for this license, from 1983’s Taz to the most recent Space Jam: A New Legacy ⨉ Snipes. Characters from Looney Tunes also appeared in the 2022 release MultiVersus
1. Intro 00:00 2. Gameplay 00:15 3. Outro 06:19
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For more sports game videos check out the playlists below
Console Sports Games of 1993 https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLFJOZYl1h1CEhIf6hohng9T2IPLCpzn7o
Console Sports Games of 1994 https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLFJOZYl1h1CGSF_AK734XDflipeUo8Dr9
(via GIFER)
Clue (Sega Genesis), 1992.
This post took way too long to complete. Turns out getting pixel-perfect screenshots of cutscenes from very difficult games is, well, difficult. I soon gave up my attempt to get to the end of levels myself, instead settling for footage taken by speedrunners. Even with that in my hands it took a while to find the right spots and get clean(ish) images/GIFs extracted and resized.
Anyway, above are carefully selected scenes from the SNES series Super Star Wars, spanning all three movies of the original trilogy (Episodes 4–6). I say carefully because a big percentage of story artworks were shitly converted movie shots and not worth posting as pixel art inspiration. But the few scenes above have enough dithering to keep my 16-bit heart happy.
For an overview of the series (and other Star Wars games from the same era) check out the second episode of a retrospective done by GameTrailers in 2008:
‘The Legend of Prince Valiant’ [aka: ‘Kingdom Crusade’ (Game Boy version)]
[GB / NES] [UK] [MAGAZINE] [1992]
Prince Valiant in the Days of King Arthur or simply Prince Valiant, is an American comic strip created by Hal Foster in 1937. It is an epic adventure that has told a continuous story during its entire history, and the full stretch of that story now totals more than 4000 Sunday strips. Currently, the strip appears weekly in more than 300 American newspapers, according to its distributor, King Features Syndicate.
The Duke of Windsor called Prince Valiant the "greatest contribution to English literature in the past hundred years". Generally regarded by comics historians as one of the most impressive visual creations ever syndicated, the strip is noted for its realistically rendered panoramas and the intelligent, sometimes humorous, narrative. The format does not employ word balloons. Instead, the story is narrated in captions positioned at the bottom or sides of panels. Events depicted are taken from various time periods, from the late Roman Empire to the High Middle Ages, with a few brief scenes from modern times (commenting on the "manuscript"). ~Wikipedia
Source: Computer & Video Games. November 1992 (#132) || Internet Archive; Jason Scott