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Mail is the fastest character, but is the one whose jump is lowest. Tatt is balanced - slower than Mail but faster than Gaw - and his jump is similarly in between. Gaw is the slowest of the three, but can jump the highest and usually has the strongest attacks. The character encounters enemies as well as non-playable characters. Often, when ...
A non-playable character known as Denshin (電神) (voiced by Mao), based on the Dreamcast character from Sega Hard Girls, summons the playable characters for their aid to combat a malevolent entity (voiced by Ken Narita) from the organization Zetsumu who takes the form of the captured playable characters, followed by a form of Akira Yuki from ...
Pages in category "Sega characters" The following 5 pages are in this category, out of 5 total. This list may not reflect recent changes. A. Alis Landale; B.
Rez in-game screenshot on the Sega Dreamcast. Rez is a video game that combines mechanics from the music game genre and rail shooters like Panzer Dragoon. [4] Players take the role of a hacker infiltrating a malfunctioning artificial intelligence and fighting off viruses and corrupted security programs. [5]
Traysia (known as Minato no Traysia in Japan) is a traditional role-playing video game that was released on February 14, 1992 by Renovation Products for the Sega Genesis.The player controls a young man named Roy who is dropped off in the Kingdom of Salon by his uncle, a traveling merchant, and is joined by three other characters to begin a journey that leads them against a shadowy group of ...
Last Bronx [a] is a 1996 3D fighting video game developed by Sega AM3 on the Sega Model 2 mainboard. [5] It was released in Japanese and American arcades before home versions were produced in for the contemporary Sega Saturn and Windows systems in 1997.
At first the game was literally a shooting gallery with limited AI. After 6 months of development a new prototype was created with an emphasis on scoring rather than narrative. The gameplay was designed before any setting and back story was created. Many publishers declined to take on the title before Sega chose to back it. [2]
Illusionware gave it the grade A/92% and wrote that the game strikes the "perfect" balance between graphics, music and gameplay and an "excellent piece of gaming history". [4] Sega-16 writer Benjamin Galway gave the grade 9 out of 10. [ 5 ]