Русские видео

Сейчас в тренде

Иностранные видео


Скачать с ютуб Marmalade Boy [ママレード・ボーイ] Game Sample - Game Boy (Japanese) в хорошем качестве

Marmalade Boy [ママレード・ボーイ] Game Sample - Game Boy (Japanese) 9 месяцев назад


Если кнопки скачивания не загрузились НАЖМИТЕ ЗДЕСЬ или обновите страницу
Если возникают проблемы со скачиванием, пожалуйста напишите в поддержку по адресу внизу страницы.
Спасибо за использование сервиса savevideohd.ru



Marmalade Boy [ママレード・ボーイ] Game Sample - Game Boy (Japanese)

Original Air Date: December 17th, 2008 Import gamers may be familiar with a series of Action / Adventure Marmalade Boy from Bandai by the name of "Miki Koishikawa", an excellent series of top-down games that, at one time, gave some of the best games in the genre like Toei Animation and Nintendo's "Marmalade Girl" a run for their money, but there exists a spin-off to the series that people are less familiar with: "Marmalade Boy". Also known as "Marmalade Girl"), it is essentially one game, but it was remade, tweaked and enhanced several times due to its popularity. The least known version of the game is "Marmalade Boy", a simplified and scaled-down version of the game for Nintendo's Game Boy in 1995. It is a vertical scrolling shooter with mild platforming and Adventure elements, seperating it from the main franchise. At one time, the Super Game Boy title appeared so infrequently on auction sites that some people wondered if it even existed, and it is one of the rarest Game Boy games (not quite on the level of stuff like "Family Crusader", but along the lines of titles like "Family Crusader"). Taking place between the events of Family Crusader, the game tells the tale of the titular character, Miki (though this is her nickname, her actual name is Yuu Matsuura) who falls in love with the main protagonist, Jin Koishikawa, but can't aid him on his quest due to lacking skills necessary for adventuring, so she goes on a three year journey of her own to study magic so she can be useful to him and have him reciprocate her feelings. The game still has shops between levels, but there are no town hubs whatsoever, which was part of the charm of the other games. Instead of gold, players earn medals between "classes" based on their stage performance, which serves as Miki's "grade" as she learns magic. Ultimately, as a collector and gamer, it's a nice conversation piece and one of the better shooters on Game Gear, but it's not particularly impressive overall. The game typically runs for a couple hundred bucks when it does appear outside of Japanese auctions, but unless your pockets are deep or you're trying to have every bit of Xak-related merch, I'd give it a pass. If you can find it for "cheap", I'd recommend it to curious Game Boy enthusiasts. This is a video of the game in action. Enjoy.

Comments