
I think I’ll track down a different controller before making my final judgment, but so far so good. I’m not sure yet if the controls are unresponsive or if the six-button pad that comes with the Genesis 3 just doesn’t do diagonals well.

It’s an isometric game, so you spend a lot of time moving in diagonals.

I’m just having some doubts about the controls, though. I was a fan of Dark Savior on the Saturn, so it’s no wonder I’m liking this one. It’s a fun action-adventure/RPG with platforming elements, puzzle-solving, and fantastic graphics that manage to look appealing despite the miniscule color palette of the Genesis.
#Lethal enforcers 2 sega cd bin cue manual
Shouldn’t a tutorial at least describe what all the buttons on the screen do? Once I found a transcription of the manual online, things fell into place. I bought the game used, cart-only, and was utterly lost. Populous (SNES): I’m not sure what it says about a game when its tutorial mode provides absolutely no instructions in any way.(After all, that’s the point of this site.) But in the meantime, I’m going to post quick impressions of the games that I’ve been playing lately but haven’t spent enough time with to properly review.

But either way, I play a lot of games, and I play a lot of games for a couple hours at a time.Įventually, I’ll get around to playing each game long enough to properly review it. So either the internet destroyed my attention span, or I just grew up a little, I’m not sure what it is. I think it happened when I started spending more time on the internet. I just don’t have the attention span for that anymore. When I was younger, I could dedicate myself to a single game for hours on end, day after day. Or, at the very least, I’m not a very dedicated gamer. I mentioned on the About page that I’m something of a lazy gamer. Cool not just for what it contains, but mainly just for the fact that it’s there. It’s nothing too special, but it’s like a hidden treasure. My favorite disc of goodies? NiGHTS: Into Dreams for the Saturn. Most people will never even see it, but I, since I took the time to look, got to find that little bit of extra fun. It might be called “EXTRA,” or it might even be called “SECRET.” It’s a folder that was hidden away, just for the fans. But the best is when you find that bonus folder.
#Lethal enforcers 2 sega cd bin cue full
You might even find HTML files full of Japanese text. Occasionally, you’ll find playable media files. Other times, there are text files with copyright information. Sometimes, you’ll just find the game’s files. It seems 3DO games are completely unreadable in normal CD drives, Neo-Geo CD games don’t have much of interest, and TurboGrafx CD/Turbo Duo games just show up as unplayable audio CDs.īut just as I remembered, Saturn (and Dreamcast) games are particularly fun to check out. Unfortunately, my search was not particularly fruitful. Today, I remembered the way I used to check almost every disc-based game I had in my CD-ROM in hopes of finding a few goodies and decided to give it another shot, now that I have a lot more systems to explore. At the very best, there may be a secret or two to uncover. At the very least, it provides a little insight into the technical structure of the game.

I’m sure most of us have put a game CD into a stereo to listen to its soundtrack, but how many have put games into a PC’s CD-ROM drive to explore its contents? Probably not quite as many. Sure, I was familiar with CDs, but I thought it was really cool that I could take these games, which were meant to be played on a console, and explore them in a number of other devices that can also play CDs. The Sega Saturn was my first CD-based console, and I remember being really intrigued by the format.
