![]() ![]() Altogether, the game's not very long, very good, or very bad - which at least wins it the dubious distinction of being the best Bomberman game on the PlayStation to date. The music in BFR alternates between sounding like a speeded-up tape and an imported electronic toy - ultimately, these sounds earn the game points for quirkiness. The graphics are a bit plain for this generation of PlayStation games, and pop-up and build are an issue, of course, but it's not a horrible-looking game. In the two-player split-screen mode, you can make a bet and race against a friend. Make enough, and you can buy extra power-ups, better Tiras and Louies, and gain entrance into the next race. If you come in first, second, or third, you'll get cash. Using a feature available in a number of Japan-only horseracing video games, you can make your mount sprint ahead for short distances until it tires. (Just about everything is here, from power bombs to triple bombs plus, there are a few new items as well). In the single-player mode, you race against four opponents, drop or throw bombs at them, and use power-ups found along the way. Walkthrough updated 9.11.14 IGN's Bomberman Fantasy Race complete strategy guide and walkthrough will lead you through every step of Bomberman Fantasy Race from the title screen to the final. Looking for fun racing action game, Look no further than Bomberman Fantasy Race, Lightning fast competition zany obstacle infested tracks and of course bombs, It's a battle-racing game like you've never seen. ![]() With Kazuko Sugiyama, Naoki Tatsuta, Mizuki Otsuka, Marina no. #Bomberman fantasy race guide seriesThe bomb-chucking star of Hudson's genre-defying series and several of his friends have saddled up on Tiras (the worried-looking hippo-dinosaur hybrids) and Louies (the excitable kangaroo creatures introduced several games back), and they are competing in races for money and fame. Bomberman Fantasy Race: Directed by Yasuhiro Doi, Takahiko Kodaira. Since Bomberman has long been known to play with fire and explosives, it was really just a matter of time before he added the track to his long list of vices. It hit Mega Man in the Japanese release Rockman: Battle & Chase and Square's cutesy-cutesy Chocobo in Chocobo Racing. My going theory is that it was started by whoever dumped the ROM maybe that's what it's refered to in the ROM header? (I know jack shit about dumping ROMs, so I don't know.) Regardless, I think of "Arcade Edition" as an unofficial subtitle that's great for differentiating it from the US/PAL B64s.The undeniable urge to race has struck many a platform- and puzzle-game hero. But here in the Digital Press online guide, ROM sites, and a few other places like Buy-Rite, that's what's it called. all of which makes me wonder - how'd it get the "Arcade Edition" subtitle? The game simply refers to itself as "Bomberman 64" on the packaging and title screen. Panic Bomber (also an MVS game!) was just one of a couple different incarnations of Panic Bomber, which is also included (in different form) on B64: Arcade Edition. Neo Bomberman, which was on MVS hardware (no AES release), has a similar font (substituting a bomb for the 'o'), but it's a different game. ![]() ![]() There's definitely no relation to the first two. These are the Bomberman games I see in MAME: Bomber Man (Irem, 1991), Bomber Man World (Irem, 1992), Neo Bomberman (Hudson Soft, 1997), Panic Bomber (Hudson Soft, 1994). The review doesn't say, but isn't this game a port of one of the Bomberman arcade games? It looks exactly like one of the MAME titles, right down to the unique lettering. ![]()
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