Entries Tagged 'sega Master System Games' ↓

Guide Hungry Brick People To Tasty Fruit In Sega’s Latest Arcade Puzzle Game

Guide Hungry Brick People To Tasty Fruit in Sega’s Latest Arcade Puzzle Game

Stack bricks with a purpose in Sega’s latest arcade puzzle game, Brick People, for iPhone and iPad.

The hungry little Brick People are yearning for some tasty fruit snacks, but they just can’t reach them! It’s your job to build brick steps and structures in order to assist them in obtaining their healthy treats.

At the beginning of each mission you’ll be tasked with helping the Brick People obtain a specific amount of food, which you can keep track of at the top of the screen, before time expires. Since you don’t have direct control over the Brick People, you’ll have to place bricks in the most convenient spots in order to allow them to reach even the highest fruit.

You can grab an unlimited amount of bricks from either side of the screen and place them anywhere in the play area, even on the Brick People themselves. Don’t worry, they won’t be harmed, they’ll just climb right up the bricks. not all Brick People are created equal, so you must pay attention to how they interact with the environment to complete each mission as quickly as possible.

Brick Monsters will occasionally cause you some trouble by hiding your fruit behind bricks. these same troublemakers will also require you to build specific shapes from your bricks in between missions. The faster your complete the shapes, the more bonus time you’ll receive for your next mission.

Brick People includes a single player mode with three difficulty levels, a head-to-head multiplayer mode that can be played locally over Bluetooth (iPad allows for same-device multiplayer), and full Game Center integration.

Brick People for iPhone and iPod touch is available for $.99, while Brick People HD for iPad is available for $1.99.

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Where can i find a good super mario world rom and a good yoshi's island rom ?

im looking and loking and i cant find those roms i would like someone with experience with roms to help me please and someone who has played those roms before

I've never had trouble finding ROMs by simply Googling the name of the game along with "rom." with games as well-known as the two you mentioned it shouldn't take long to find them.

Is it possible to download old Sega genesis games from internet and then play in the PC?

If it is possible then where? but only if it's for free, I would like to get Sonic and Pocahontas, because that was my favourite games when I was little…

yes. do a search for emulators and roms.

dear u can get the same game from the site mobiledownloads4u.com that also free downloding site

The Weird And Wonderful World Of The Sega Genesis [Total Recall]

One of the great things about the Genesis (or Mega Drive, depending on where you’re from) is the fact that, unlike most other major consoles, Sega licensed out its technology, meaning a range of companies could , along with Sega itself, come up with their own wacky versions of the console.

While some of these were disasters, some were surprisingly innovative pieces of technology.

The actual, official, standard Sega Genesis/Mega Drive was first released in Japan in 1988, and over the next nine years would see just one official worldwide update, the Genesis/Mega Drive II. Meaning as far as Sega was concerned, for the majority of consumers over the system’s original lifespan, there were just two consoles.

For a select few, though, and depending on the region, there were many, many more. from 1988 until the present day, over a dozen variations and special models of the Genesis have been released, ranging in price and scope from cheap retro playthings to complicated, expensive computer systems.

The gallery above details some of our favourites, so click through to see them in all their strange, strange glory.

Sega PAC – The Sega PAC was an add-on for the Pioneer LaserActive Laserdisc player, which literally bolted onto the media unit and allowed it to play both Genesis and Sega-CD games. Costing $600 upon release in 1993 (and that’s just for the add-on), the Sega PAC was an expensive unit for a short-lived, expensive machine. It did, however, come with a fancy custom controller.

Wondermega – Sega licensed both its Genesis and Sega-CD technology to JVC, who released a variation on the console known as the Wondermega (or, for some Americans, the “X’eye:). While for all intents just a Genesis and Sega-CD in different casing, the Wondermega did ship with some cool music-creating tools, and these days looks a lot like something you’d see lying around the Mass Effect universe.

Mega Jet – In the early 1990′s, Japan Airlines was at the forefront of pioneering in-flight entertainment, and was doing so with devices like the Mega Jet, a “portable” Mega Drive unit that users plugged into seat-back screens and that could play any retail cartridge from the console. The Mega Jet would (with the addition of a colour screen) later be released in the US as the Sega Nomad, a true portable Genesis console that could chew through an entire packet of AA batteries in the time it’d take you to get past a game’s menu screen.

Amstrad Mega PC – perhaps the most unusual of all, and certainly my personal favourite, the Amstrad Mega PC was a complete personal computer that also shipped with a Mega Drive console contained within. It was released in 1993 in Europe and Australia, and despite my ceaseless protestations, I was never allowed to get one. Probably because, as would ultimately doom the system, it was a rubbish PC by 1993 standards, with the addition of a Mega Drive (the console’s board was simply slid into the computer’s casing) not justifying the expensive cost for such a rubbish PC.

The Sega TeraDrive was a similar project for the Japanese market, only its PC was made by IBM, not Amstrad.

Sega Mega-Tech – The Mega-Tech was an arcade system developed by Sega which used Mega Drive hardware – complete with cartridge slots – for arcade gaming. Instead of buying credits, a player’s money bought time on the system, the potentially shorter time offset by the ability to switch between whichever cartridges the machine had installed mid-game.

While never released in North America, the Mega-Tech (and its successor, the Mega-Play) played host to some of Sega’s best games, like Outrun, after Burner, Shinobi, Golden Axe and Sonic.

Sega Multi-Mega – oh dear. The Multi-Mega, known as the CDX in the US, was a 1994 release that hoped to make Mega Drive gaming look a little more sleek and modern by slimming it down in the casing of a discman, or portable CD player. a tiny device not much larger than its CD drive, the Multi-Mega could play Sega CD and Mega Drive games. Woefully expensive and utterly pointless, it was the last full-price Mega Drive console offered by Sega, and as such is a sad chapter to close out one of the best gaming consoles of all time.

Note that these are just some of the variations of the Genesis/Mega Drive released. Both Sega and other companies have put out a number of cheap, retro “re-releases” of the hardware, some dating as far back as the late 1990s (the Genesis 3) and others still being released “new” to this day.

My Sega Nomad won't work!?

I found this old Sega Nomad, a couple games for it, and the charger for it yesterday, and kept it charging all night. and when I woke up and tried it, the screen flashed something that was yellow and green, then turned black, and the low batt. light is red. Please help.