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Viewing games 101 to 110


The Terminator 2: Arcade game is one of the all time favorites.

Rolling Thunder 2
Freeware game by Namco Ltd.
A follow up to the original Rolling Thunder, this game is your basic shot-the-bad-guys-and-save-the-world game.

Phelios
Freeware game by Namco
You are Apollo who is trying to save Artemis from Typhon by riding Pegasus through seven challenging levels.
Editor-in-chief says: If you like Greek mythology, you have to play this great game. Phelios was released in 1990 for the Sega Mega Drive/Genesis and I remember playing it for hours and hours until I had to go to school the second day. I controlled Apollo, riding on the swing horse Pegasus, who had a sword which fired if the fire button was pressed. If the button was held down, upon its release a bigger fireball was released from the sword of the God of Sun. Although the story was simple and short, I have enjoyed Phelios for few weeks before moving to other games.
Hellfire
Freeware game by Toaplan Arcade Games / Taito
Horizontal space shooter, arcade conversion from Toaplan's original game.

Gunstar Heroes
Best!Freeware game by Treasure Co., Ltd.
The Earth has been taken over by a power-hungry, hi-tech dictator and his formidable army. Mankind's only hope are the Gunstar Heroes.

Duke Nukem 3D
Freeware game by 3D Realms
Duke Nukem 3D is a 3D first-person shooter starring action hero Duke Nukem.

Chaos Engine
Freeware game by Bitmap Brothers, The
Chaos Engine delivers the kind of arcade-style, two-player shooting action.

Caliber Fifty
Freeware game by Mentrix Software
It's twenty years after the end of the Vietnam War. Your mission, should you decide to accept it, is to venture forth once again on the Ho Chi Minh trail and try to rescue some of the downed American airmen left behind.

Bio-Hazard Battle
Freeware game by SEGA Entertainment, Inc.
An army of biogenetic mutants has gone haywire, terrorizing the world and putting the future of the planet in jeopardy.

Battletech
Freeware game by Malibu Games
Take control of a Matcat Mech as you fight your way through several level of mechanized mayhem.
Editor-in-chief says: There were few other games of this kind back in the 80s, when Battletech was published on the market. The BattleDroids were spectacular robots, although the game was unfortunately not taken enough care of because of the conflicts with George Lucas' company and lawsuits. There was unfortunately not the option to change out pieces of a mech (or droid), but only to equip a classification of the mech. Weapons and armor were easy to change, just like in a first-person shooter. Too bad the menu had to be used in order to fire individual weapons, it took more time than enough.
