Tmnt 4 nes
While the game controls just fine on a basic level, the missions were just tired and repetitive. In practice, however, the game was a jumbled mess. On paper, having a 3D action game with an on-the-fly switchable cast being made by action game auteurs PlatinumGames is a great idea.
#Tmnt 4 nes ps3
TMNT – Mutants in Manhattan (Xbox 360 and PS3 | 2014) This game was punishing and cheap, had some questionable level design and boss fights, and made old-school gamers fear the term “underwater levels”.Īt the very least, this NES “classic” spearheaded the charge which led to better games down the line. It was absurdly difficult, even for NES game standards. In retrospect, it was replayable for the wrong reasons. Back then, we had slim pickings and this single-player 2D action game with four different playable turtles was quite a wild ride and a replayable trip. The first Ninja Turtles game of its kind had a lot to live up to.
Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles (NES | 1989)
There’s a crapload of these licensed ninja turtle games to go through, so we’re limiting our selections down to ten games (5 bad, 5 good), starting with the bottom of the turtle barrel to the cream of the Ooze crop. We’re going to point out the best and worst of the lot. And within those trove of gems lie the turds that still solidify the “license games are always bad” stigma. While most of them are average, there are a few gems that players remember fondly. It’s also a stark reminder that the Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles had been a merchandise juggernaut since the 90s, video games included.įrom 1989 until now, we had a slew of Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles games based on various incarnations of the fab four, be it the original animated series to the Nickelodeon reboots.
The recent announcement of Dotemu and Tribute Games’ Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles: Shredder’s Revengeis another addition to the awesome wave of new-yet-kinda-old beat-em-ups we’ve been seeing since 2019’s River City Girls.