Our Price: $199.99 Release Date: 10/20/2009 UPC: 711719890805 Genre: Hardware Company: Sony Version: USA
Stock Status: In Stock
The Sony PSP 98908 Gran Turismo Bundle includes a Mystic Silver PSP 3000 system, the Gran Turismo PSP game on UMD, a PlayStation Network downloadable voucher for a white Chevrolet Corvette ZR1, a color not available in the game and is exclusive to this entertainment pack, 2GB Memory Stick PRO Duo, a PlayStation Store downloadable movie voucher for a movie to be determined, and a Sony MusicPass voucher good for 10 downloadable songs, available to U.S. residents only.
Features
1 x Silver PSP 3000
1 x Gran Turismo PSP UMD Game
1 x 2 GB Memory Stick PRO Duo
1 x Vouchers for a movie on PlayStation Network, 10 song downloads from Sony Music, and an in-game white Chevrolet Corvette ZR1
The Xbox 360 version of Raiden IV comes with a couple of extra modes for added replay. There will also be downloadable content for purchase, which includes gamerpics and dashboard themes. New player ships, such as the Fighting Thunder Mk-II (Original Raiden) and the Fairy will be available for purchase and download in the marketplace for use in the game.[6] A TATE option is included for players to view the game in either vertical or horizontal screens for their preferred shooting experience. There will be a total of 47 achievements with a total of 1000 points in the game.
The gameplay of Raiden IV is identical to its prior installments, although its level design is different than Raiden III, but it is exactly the same as Raiden II, as the player starts from in-land, over the farms. In later levels the game progresses through a vast cityscape, into the sky, and finally onward to space. The player faces many enemies, powerful stages, and fearless bosses. The Flash Shot System, first introduced in Raiden III, returns in IV. Multipliers are given for destroying enemies that just appeared on screen; the faster players destroy enemies, the higher the bonuses are.
As with previous Raiden titles, the ship fires simultaneously with two weapons: the main weapon and the sub-weapon. Weapons have a power level, which increases by collecting individual powerups. In addition there are bombs that fill more or less the whole screen, harming enemies and dissolving all enemy shots. At the beginning of the game or after the player dies, the default weapons are a three-way Vulcan (see below), a marked increase of firepower over the one-way Vulcan of the previous Raiden games, no secondary weapon and three bombs (the number of bombs can be altered as a game option). The weapons, bombs and bonus items, like fairies, in Raiden III are retained and works the same as before in this game.
Features
The Raiden IV Limited Edition contains:
Raiden IV the game
An exclusive soundtrack along which includes remixes from INH (Insanity Naked Hunter) composers Go Sato and Akira Sato.
Rush Mode
Players fight all level bosses without going through the stages.
Score Attack Mode
Similar to the Xbox 360 Mode, the only differences are the enemy placements have now changed. Background music which were previously fixed for the specific stage can be selected in any level.
Gallery
As players go through the game, 3D renditions of the enemy ships will be unlocked for viewing in the gallery.
World Rankings
Xbox 360 players can place their best scores and rankings earned from Solo Arcade and Xbox 360 modes onto the Xbox Live leaderboards. Players will be able to compare, share and view game replays for analyzing of other players' performance. The mode requires the player to access an online version of the Arcade and Xbox 360 modes, separate from the offline versions, in order to place their scores.
Difficulty: There will be 8 different difficulty modes to choose from.
* Practice: Enemies do not fire shots in the game.
* Very Easy: Enemies' shots can be destroyed by the player.
* Easy: Enemies' shots are relatively slow in this difficulty.
* Normal: Default difficulty in console version.
* Original: Same difficulty as in the Arcade version.
* Hard: Enemies' shots are a bit quicker in speed, for intermediate players.
* Very Hard: Enemies' shots are much quicker in speed, for expert players.
Our Price: $59.99 Release Date: 10/1/2009 UPC: 4582224493005 Genre: Action Company: Bandai Namco Games Version: Japan
Stock Status: In Stock
Company: Bandai Namco Games Release Date: 10/01/2009
After the success of Macross Ace Frontier (which became a bestseller in Japan since its release in 2008) a new sequel called Macross Ultimate Frontier has been announced recently to be in its last development stages. Among the anime that are set to be included in the upcoming game are Macross Do You Remember Love?, Flash Back 2012, Macross Plus, Macross 7, Macross Dynamite 7, Macross Frontier, Macross Zero and the parallel universe of Macross II. Some mecha from previous PS1 (Macross VF-X 2) and Dreamcast (Macross M3) games are also going to be included in the new game.
New game elements include new variable fighters, a new feature called “Missile Alert”, a new female character called U.N. Spacy operator Binon Colette (created exclusively for the game by Macross character designer Haruhiko Mikimoto) and also the inclusion of scenes from the anime titles previously mentioned. Macross Ultimate Frontier is currently 70% complete and is going to be released in Japan on fall 2009.
Along with the standard version of the game, there will be a Limited Edition version. This edition will feature a preview of the first Macross Frontier theatrical feature film (being released in Japan on November the 21st, 2009), a UMD which features all the opening and end titles from all the Macross titles released so far and an interview with mecha designer and Macross creator Shoji Kawamori.
Our Price: $99.99 NOW SHIPPING Release Date: 9/9/1999 UPC: 010086500004 Genre: Console Company: Sega Version: NTSC - US Version
Stock Status: In Stock
The Dreamcast was the last video game console made by Sega, and is the successor to the Sega Saturn. The Dreamcast is part of the sixth generation of video game consoles and was released in late 1998, before its contemporaries—the PlayStation 2, the Nintendo GameCube and the Xbox.
Sega discontinued the Dreamcast in North America in November 2001 and withdrew entirely from the console hardware business. However, support of the system continued in Europe and Oceania until 2002, as well as in Japan, where consoles were still sold until 2006 and new licensed games continued to be released.
Features
Units sold: 10.6 million
Media: CD, 1.2 GB GD-ROM
CPU: 200 MHz Hitachi SH4 RISC
Storage capacity: VMU, Nexus Memory Card, Zip Drive (unreleased)
Graphics: 100 MHz PowerVR2 CLX2
Online services: SegaNet, Dreamarena
Best-selling game: Sonic Adventure, 2.5 million (as of June 2006)
The system's processor is a 200 MHz SH-4 with an on-die 128-bit vector graphics engine, 360 MIPS and 1.4 GFLOPS (single precision), using the vector graphics engine.
The graphics hardware is a PowerVR2 CLX2 chipset, capable of 7.0 million polygons/second peak performance and trilinear filtering. Graphics hardware effects include gouraud shading, z-buffering, anti-aliasing, per-pixel translucency sorting and bump mapping.
The system supports approximately 16.78 million colors (24-bit) color output and displays interlaced or progressive scan video at 640x480 video resolution.
For sound, the system features a Yamaha AICA Sound Processor with a 22.5 MHz 32-Bit ARM7 RISC CPU operating at 45 MHz, 64 channel PCM/ADPCM sampler (4:1 compression), XG MIDI support and 128 step DSP.
The Dreamcast has 16 MB 64 Bit 100 MHz of main RAM, 8 MB 4x16-bit 100 MHz video RAM and 2 MB 16-bit 66 MHz sound RAM. The hardware supports VQ Texture Compression at either asymptotically 2bpp or even 1bpp
Kirby and friends are coming right in time for the Christmas season. Small and very soft, these are perfect toys for everyone. These pastel colored plushes goes well with all sorts of furnishings and Christmas trees, they don't even have to be wrapped up, simply place them under the pines and they will bring a new warmth to the house. The plush toy is a perfect form for Kirby, cuddle it and squeeze it to see how soft this pink bouncy ball is. The simple design and lines set him apart from the other plush toys.
Famitsu gave Tatsunoko vs. Capcom: Cross Generation of Heroes a 32 out of 40 calling gameplay a bit flat since skilled players are conduced to repeat Baroque combos. The reviewers noted variety of characters and its fighting system as strong aspects.[ In Japan, Ultimate All-Stars sold 10,583 units in its first week and as of June 2009, Cross Generation of Heroes has sold 41,672 units.