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The Mega Man Killers are a series of robots appearing in the Game Boy series, which Dr. Wily created to destroy Mega Man. They reappear as bosses in the Game Boy version of Mega Man V, as well as bosses in the DLC stages of Mega Man 10. They are named after notable music genres.
Mega Man & Bass, known as Rockman & Forte in Japan, is well known for being the first playable appearance of Mega Man's rival, Bass. Street Fighter X Mega Man (Street Fighter X Rockman) – PC, 2012; Street Fighter X Mega Man is a project developed by Zong Hui, combining Mega Man's gameplay with characters and settings from the Street Fighter ...
Mega Man (known as Rockman [a] in Japan) is a Japanese science fiction video game franchise developed and published by Capcom, featuring the protagonist of the same name. The original game was released for the Nintendo Entertainment System in 1987, and spawned a franchise that expanded to over 50 games on multiple systems.
Mega Man 8 [a] is a 1996 action-platform game developed and published by Capcom. ... At the end of each stage is a boss battle with a Robot Master; ...
The bosses included are the Grey Devil (similar to the Yellow Devil featured in the original Mega Man), this boss is featured in the opening level of the game. Then the player can challenge the following Robot Masters: Dangan Man, Konro Man, Aircon Man, Komuso Man, Clock Men, and Compass Man. The final boss is Rockman Shadow.
Mega Man IV [a] is an action-platform video game by Capcom for the Nintendo Game Boy.It is the fourth installment in the handheld version of the Mega Man series. The game continues the quest of the protagonist Mega Man in the struggle with his long-time nemesis Dr. Wily, who sends out a disruptive radio signal to cause a rampage, citywide destruction from dormant robots.
Mega Man battles mini-boss Hanabiran in Hornet Man's stage. The game features the same graphics and gameplay of NES-era Mega Man games. Mega Man 9 is an action-platform game in which the player controls the titular character and must complete a number of 2D side-scrolling stages. The start of the game presents a select screen of eight stages ...
The Mega Man X version of Zero appears as a hidden character in Tatsunoko vs. Capcom: Ultimate All-Stars and as a playable character in Marvel vs. Capcom 3: Fate of Two Worlds, Ultimate Marvel vs. Capcom 3, Marvel vs. Capcom: Infinite, and Teppen. [19] [20] and as a pair unit with X in Project X Zone and its sequel Project X Zone 2. [21]