Jersey Devil is a 3Dplatform game released for the PlayStation. Jersey Devil, the protagonist of the game, is (hinted by his title) the Jersey Devil, although shares more characteristics to that of a bat. His primary mission is to stop Dr. Knarf, who tries to stop Jersey Devil with mutated vegetables. Jersey Devil uses his punch, jumping, and gliding abilities to defeat his enemies. In numerous areas of the game, it is necessary to collect all five letters of Knarf's name to proceed, adding a puzzle element to the gameplay.
There are six areas in the game with three levels each: two main levels, and a secret bonus level unlockable if the player's Nitro power level is high enough.
ISS Pro Evolution (known as Winning Eleven 4 in Japan) is the third video game in ISS Pro series developed exclusively for the PlayStation by Konami Computer Entertainment Tokyo, a division of Konami. The engine has been recreated providing new player movements, animations and improved graphics. During promotion following taglines have been used: "The King of football returns" and "This really IS football!". The new version featured updated player rosters, extended amount of game modes, teams (including club teams for the very first time), stadiums and settings providing highly developed player editor not as long limited only to name edition. The game was precise in every detail and aspect of the game, such as the fact that the team captain could be selected with the captain's badge on arm and the colour of players' shoes could also be individualized. The replays could be stored on the memory card as well as won trophies and unlocked bonuses. In this version the one-two-pass system has been highly developed, becoming one of the greatest threats to the opponent and dribbling including trick-shooting has been introduced as a new trick in gameplay.
First of all I'd like to say this is the longest hardest game I have ever played in my life. For all of you who were looking for the next Final Fantasy Tactics I'm here to tell you there are some similarities, but once you start playing Atlus and Max Five's Hoshigami, you'll realize the world you're in is completely different.
The story takes place in a world known as Mardias. You play Fazz a young mercenary for hire, who has been destined in the ancient writings that he is to save the world. (Heard it, seen it, did it.) Along the way he meets different people and forms his rag-tag band...
Fans of the original and those looking for a pure driving simulation should flock to store shelves without delay, but for the rest, that add-on philosophy may not sit well.
The PC translation of Final Fantasy VII is fundamentally the same game as the PlayStation version, which makes for both its greatest strengths and its most frustrating weaknesses.
Chrono Cross is a very unique game, and the battle system shows this. First of all, CC features two things I wish every RPG featured. The first being, you can see all the enemies onscreen before you fight them. This was featured in Chrono Trigger, and Chrono Cross thankfully follows in suit. Secondly, and more importantly, you can escape from almost any battle at any time. For instance, if you’re getting the crap kicked out of you by a boss, you can just run away. There’s no waiting, you just leave as soon as you select the run away option. Brilliant! Why other games can’t do this, I don’t know…
While the system has a strong launch lineup and an even stronger lineup to follow in the initial months, today we learned of some of the games that will fill in the gaps between the bigger titles like Ridge Racer and Ninety-Nine Nights.