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Rambo (stylized on-screen as Rambo: First Blood Part II) is a 1985 video game based on the film Rambo: First Blood Part II (1985). The game was designed by David Collier and Tony Pomfret with the ZX Spectrum version converted by Platinum Productions. [1] The Commodore 64 version's music is by Martin Galway from Northern Ireland, incorporating ...
The Japanese version of the game had players controlling a pair of armed Buddhist monks named Ashura and Bishamon, who are on a mission to rescue their kidnapped friends from the enemy. When the game was being localized for the American market, Sega bought the license to base the game on Rambo: First Blood Part II. The Player 1 character was ...
Batman: The Video Game: 1989: Sunsoft: Sunsoft Batman: Battleship: 2012: Double Helix Games (PS3 & X360) Magic Pockets (Wii, DS & 3DS) Activision: Battleship: Beauty and the Beast: 1994: Probe Software: Hudson Soft: Beauty and the Beast: Bebe's Kids: 1994: Radical Entertainment [2] Paramount Interactive [3] Motown Games [2] Bebe's Kids: Bee ...
Sega adapted some of the battle scenes in the film for the 2008 arcade game Rambo. In 2014 Rambo: The Video Game, based on the first three Rambo films, was released. The 1986 arcade run and gun video game Ikari Warriors was intended by its developer SNK to be an official licensed adaptation of Rambo. However, they were initially unable to ...
Rambo is a side-scrolling action-adventure video game produced by Pack-In-Video for the Nintendo Entertainment System (NES). It was released on December 4, 1987 in Japan, and May 1988 in North America. It is based on the film Rambo: First Blood Part II (1985). The game sold 600,000 copies. [3]
2 Music videos 5 Video games 2 Bryan Cranston is an American actor, producer and director, ... Treasure Planet: Filipe (voice) 1987 Amazon Women on the Moon:
Rambo (1985 video game) Rambo (1987 video game) Rambo (2008 video game) Rambo III (video game) Rambo: First Blood Part II (Master System video game) Rambo: First Blood Part II (video game) Rambo: The Video Game
Rambo III opened in the United States on May 25, 1988, at 2,562 theaters in its opening weekend (the four-day Memorial Day weekend), ranking #2 behind Crocodile Dundee II. [ 21 ] [ 22 ] Overall, the film grossed $53.7 million in the United States and Canada, and $135.3 million overseas, giving Rambo III a box office total of $189 million. [ 5 ]