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Pages in category "Guilty Gear games" The following 10 pages are in this category, out of 10 total. This list may not reflect recent changes. G. Guilty Gear (video game)
In 2012, Complex ranked Guilty Gear at number 47 on the list of the best video game franchises, commenting: "Where other fighters were moving toward realism and more down to Earth physics and combos, Guilty Gear was content to turn those notions on their head, paving the way for the more chaotic fighters we're seeing today." [81] Yahoo!
Guilty Gear games (10 P) M. Guilty Gear media files (2 C, 5 F) Pages in category "Guilty Gear" The following 2 pages are in this category, out of 2 total.
Guilty Gear (subtitled The Missing Link in Japan) is a 2D fighting video game developed by Team Neo Blood, an Arc System Works production group led by Daisuke Ishiwatari, and published by Arc System Works.
Guilty Gear X2 (released as Guilty Gear XX: The Midnight Carnival in Japan) is a 2D fighting video game developed by Arc System Works, and published by Sammy Studios.It was first released on May 23, 2002 for Japanese arcades, and later ported to the PlayStation 2 [1] for North America in 2003. [2]
Guilty Gear Strive received "generally favorable" reviews, according to review aggregator Metacritic. [44] [45] [46] IGN said "Guilty Gear Strive is a milestone 2D fighting game that raises the bar for anime-like fighters in terms of its visuals, online netcode, and sheer creativity found in all aspects of its design."
Gekido Advance: Kintaro's Revenge (2002) Game Boy Advance; Guilty Gear Isuka (2006) Windows; Guilty Gear X2#Reload (2004) PlayStation 2, Windows, Xbox; Guinness World Records 50th Anniversary (2004) DVD player; Gun Metal (2003) Windows; Harlem Globetrotters: World Tour (2006) Game Boy Advance, Nintendo DS; Hot Wheels: All Out (2006) Game Boy ...
The second installment of the Guilty Gear series, Guilty Gear X was developed over a period of about two years after the first game's success. It was released in July 2000 for Japanese arcades , re-released on Dreamcast in December 2000, and later ported to PlayStation 2 in November 2001 and Game Boy Advance in January 2002.