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The first GunCon NPC-103 (G-Con 45 in Europe) was bundled with the PlayStation conversion of Time Crisis. [1] To make the gun affordable to consumers, the force feedback feature of the Time Crisis arcade gun was omitted, and an additional fire button was included in lieu of releasing a pedal controller for the game's ducking mechanic. [2]
The PlayStation 2 supports 3 light-gun input types, GunCon (GunCon 1), GunCon 2, and Justifier/Hyperblaster. Some games listed also support connecting an additional PS1/PS2 controller for convenient redundant button mapping, such as the Time Crisis games for cover shooting, or Resident Evil: Dead Aim for simultaneous control stick movement.
European PlayStation 3 box art. The PlayStation 3 is bundled with the GunCon 3 light gun peripheral. [8] This edition features 480p (4:3) and 720p (16:9 widescreen) support and a specially-programmed first-person shooter mode, where players engage combat similar to a typical FPS game, but with manual gun pointing, aiming and firing in addition to arcade mode.
The compilation supports both the GunCon 3 light gun and the PlayStation Move motion controller system [4] [5] as well as vibration feedback and PlayStation Eye AV Chat. [8]Two-player cooperative gameplay in Time Crisis: Razing Storm, with on-screen reticles
Periscope is an early electro-mechanical game, [3] and the first arcade game to cost one quarter per play. [4] Sega's 1969 game Missile features electronic sound and a moving film strip to represent the targets on a projection screen, [ 5 ] and its 1972 game Killer Shark features a mounted light gun with targets whose movement and reactions are ...
Time Crisis II is a 1997 light-gun shooter video game developed and published by Namco for arcades.It is the second installment in the Time Crisis series. The game incorporates the same mechanics of its predecessor, with some minor changes, but with the addition of co-operative two-player gaming.
This iteration features a redesigned cabinet that uses a flat-screen monitor, a departure from the older arcade releases; it features current graphics and new stages, including HD-remastered stages from Point Blank 1-3, a GunCon controller similar to the one used in Time Crisis 4 with old colors, and the capability to dispense tickets. [1]
The Hyper Blaster was also the first light gun for the PlayStation, preceding the release of Namco's GunCon by a few years. Project Horned Owl , a gun-shooting game published by Sony Computer Entertainment, was the first title to support it. [ 2 ]