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OpenBOR is royalty-free and its licensing model allows authors to create commercial games, although authors are asked to mention the engine as part of a splash screen or in some similar manner. [15] Due to efforts towards backward compatibility, most modules intended for the Beats of Rage engine will play on OpenBOR. However, the enemy ...
Castlevania: Harmony of Dissonance was re-released in North America in January 2006, along with Castlevania: Aria of Sorrow, as part of Castlevania Double Pack. Both games are contained on a single GBA Game Pak. This pack appeared in Europe later that year. It was picked as the IGN Game Boy Game of the Month for January 2006. [41]
A series of downloadable content packs were released for the game, featuring additional wrestlers and arenas. [15] [16] Versions for the PlayStation 3, Xbox 360 and Android were also announced, but never released. [14] The 2021 title RetroMania Wrestling was heavily inspired by WrestleFest and was also promoted as a successor to the original ...
Streets of Rage 4 [a] is a 2020 beat 'em up game developed by Dotemu, Lizardcube, and Guard Crush Games and published by Dotemu.The game is a continuation of Sega's Streets of Rage trilogy, originally released for the Sega Genesis during the 1990s.
Bruce Lee: Quest of the Dragon is a pure beat 'em up, using a 3D graphics engine and consisting of normal section where the player is brawling against multiple common enemies, and of one-on-one boss fights.
Mortal Kombat: Shaolin Monks is a 2005 action-adventure game developed and published by Midway for the PlayStation 2 and Xbox. [4] A spin-off of the Mortal Kombat franchise, it is a retelling of the events of Mortal Kombat II (1993).
Golden Axe (ゴールデンアックス, Gōruden Akkusu) is a series of side-scrolling beat 'em up arcade video games developed by Sega.The series takes place in a medieval fantasy world where several heroes have the task of recovering the legendary Golden Axe, the mainstay element of the series.
Battle Arena Toshinden, released as Toh Shin Den [a] [b] [2] in Japan, is a 1995 fighting video game developed by Tamsoft and published by Takara for the PlayStation. [3] It was one of the first fighting games, after Virtua Fighter on arcade and console, to boast polygonal characters in a 3D environment, and features a sidestep maneuver which is credited for taking the genre into "true 3D."