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Battle Mania Daiginjō [a] is a horizontal side-scrolling shoot'em-up released by Vic Tokai for the Mega Drive in 1993. It serves as a sequel to the original Battle Mania, which was released in North America under the title Trouble Shooter.
Trouble Shooter, originally released in Japan as Battle Mania [a], is a horizontally scrolling shooter developed and published by Vic Tokai for the Mega Drive/Genesis.It was released in November 1991 in North America and March 6, 1992 in Japan.
Tsurumi deduces that Koito was captured by Russians who intend to immobilize the Japanese Oominato Torpedo Group and Fort Hakodate. After locating the kidnappers at the abandoned army base of Goryoukaku some kilometers away, Commander Heiji and Tsurumi race there and manage to free him, with Tsurumi killing his captors.
His Ainu name is Ipopte (イポㇷ゚テ, Ipopte) and his father was one of the men killed by Noppera-bo. Tsurumi discovers that he is secretly working with Hijikata and turns him into a double agent. Yōhei Nikaidō (二階堂 洋平, Nikaidō Yōhei) Voiced by: Tomokazu Sugita (Japanese); Stephen Fu (English)
Under the guise of quelling a prison riot, Tsurumi leads an assault on Abashiri Prison. Tsurumi corners Sugimoto in Nopperabo's cell, but Kadokura releases the master prison lock to save himself, freeing all of the prison's inmates. Hijikata and Anji take Asirpa and follow Inudou to a chapel where Wilk is being held, but Asirpa flees.
Back in Otaru, Tsurumi reveals to Nikaidou that Kiroranke was a teenage member of the group responsible for the assassination of Emperor Alexander II in Russia, and he leaked information to the Russians that Kiroranke was on his way into Russian Sakhalin. Just as Kiroranke's group cross the border disguised as Uilta, a Russian sniper shoots the ...
Jonathan Jackson is taking a brief hiatus from General Hospital.. On Monday, Feb. 17, PEOPLE confirmed that the actor — who plays Lucky Spencer — will be missing from a few episodes of the ...
Moe Tsurumi (鶴見萌, born 1996), a Japanese singer; Nobuhiko Tsurumi (鶴見信彦, born 1966), a Japanese baseball player; Roppyaku Tsurumi (鶴見 六百, born 1965), Japanese video game producer; Ryoya Tsurumi (鶴見凌也, born 2001), a Japanese baseball player; Shingo Tsurumi (鶴見 辰吾, born 1964), Japanese actor