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Top Gun: Danger Zone, developed by Distinctive Software and published by Konami, was released for PC in 1991. The players have a choice of two aircraft: F-14 Tomcat and F-18 Hornet. The mission choices are intercept, escort, clear airspace, provide air support, and run interference.
F-14 Tomcat is a 2001 action video game released for the Game Boy Advance developed by Virtucraft and published by Majesco. It is an enhanced port of Turn and Burn: No-Fly Zone for the SNES. [2] Two other games for the Game Boy Advance, Super Hornet F/A 18F [3] and F24 Stealth Fighter [4] were built on the same game engine.
The game uses the F-14B version of the F-14 Tomcat even where anachronistic because the developers found the original, underpowered F-14A unforgiving and "not much fun" in an entertainment flight simulator. [1] An expansion pack, Fleet Defender: Scenario, and a port for the PC-98 were released in 1995.
After Burner [a] is a rail shooter arcade video game developed and released by Sega in 1987. [9] [10] The player controls an American F-14 Tomcat fighter jet and must clear each of the game's eighteen unique stages by destroying incoming enemies. The plane is equipped with a machine gun and a limited supply of heat-seeking missiles.
Turn and Burn: No-Fly Zone is a jet flight simulator from Absolute Entertainment for the Super NES, released in 1994. [2] It is the sequel to Turn and Burn: The F-14 Dogfight Simulator, a Game Boy game which also featured the F-14 Tomcat aircraft. An enhanced port of this game was released as F-14 Tomcat on Game Boy Advance.
A high-resolution graphic after player 1 wins. The player assumes the role of Maverick in an F-14 Tomcat as he is summoned for a new operation, divided into three missions. . The enemy is not explicitly identified but boss characters are all highly advanced Soviet Union prototypes from the time, and the enemy aces have stereotypical Russian-styled names such as "Gorky", "Demitri", and "Stali
Tomcat (also known as F14 Tomcat [2] [5] [6]) is a video game published in 1989 in the UK by Players Software. [7] The game was released on the Acorn Electron, BBC Micro, Commodore 16, Commodore Plus/4, Commodore 64, Amstrad CPC, and ZX Spectrum [5] as a budget title. [8] [9] It was also on a Your Sinclair magazine cover tape.
Mission maps are based on fictional locations. Airforce Delta features over thirty aircraft to take for a test flight. [3] They are all based on real life aircraft both in looks and handling. [3] Some of the planes available for these missions include the F-4 Phantom, F-14 Tomcat, A-10 Thunderbolt, Mig 29, Su-27 and the F-22 Raptor. [3]