It may be time to head back to school, but you can still have some fun on your favorite rides and attractions in Bullfrog’s Theme Park- or maybe not. Released for every console this side of the Game.Con, it does its best to mimic its more powerful siblings, but sadly falls short in the process, kind of like Euro Disney.
Reviews
Shining in the Darkness
Like RPGs? Good! We’ve got a review of the one that started the entire line of Shining games. Sega’s 1991 monster adventure, Shining in the Darkness, ushered in a new era of quality titles that have all maintained some sort of relation to each other, and have spawned over fifteen entries on more than half a dozen consoles. Read on, and see where it all began.
Captain America and the Avengers
Most super hero games turn out, well… less than good. Ah hell, let’s be honest. Most of them just plain suck. With Captain America & the Avengers, Data East took a campy, corny arcade game and brought it home pretty faithfully to the Genesis. Still, a good port of a bad game is still a bad game. To see how bad it can get, read our full review.
Super Thunder Blade
An arcade smash and Genesis original, Super Thunder Blade defied the system’s lack of hardware scaling and showed what some good programming could accomplish. We here at Sega-16 are big fans, and have a full review for your perusal. Come on in and share the love.
Zombies Ate My Neighbors
Wacky aliens and chainsaw-wielding madmen were the norm in LucasArts’ humorous action hit Zombies Ate My Neighbors. As funny as it was challenging, the game never let up, and was tremendous fun with a friend.