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RoboCop 3 is a video game based on the 1993 film of the same name. Amiga, Atari ST and DOS versions were developed by Digital Image Design beginning in September 1990, and published by Ocean Software in December 1991. The Digital Image Design version includes multiple gameplay styles.
RoboCop 3 is the first film to use digital morphing in more than one scene. [8] The film was a critical and commercial failure in the US, grossing $47 million worldwide against its $22 million budget, making it the least profitable film of the RoboCop franchise. [6]
RoboCop 3 is a 1991 video game developed by Digital Image Design and published by Ocean for the Amiga.It features multiple gameplay styles. During 1992 and 1993, other versions consisting of side-scrolling platform gameplay were released for the Atari ST, Commodore 64, Game Gear, Nintendo Entertainment System (NES), Sega Genesis, Super Nintendo Entertainment System (SNES), and ZX Spectrum.
RoboCop 3: Original Motion Picture Soundtrack is the soundtrack to the film of the same name, composed by Basil Poledouris and released by Varèse Sarabande in 1993. An expanded version of the soundtrack was released on September 19, 2016.
The title music by Richard Joseph is a marimba-heavy rendition of the RoboCop film theme. [3] James Pond 2 was originally released on the Amiga, Atari ST and Sega Genesis in 1991 by three different publishers. It was next ported to Amiga AGA, Amiga CD32, Game Gear, Commodore 64, Master System, PC, Acorn Archimedes, Game Boy and SNES.
RoboCop Vol 3: Last Stand Part Two (collects issues #5-8, Dec. 2014) RoboCop: Dead Or Alive Volume One (collects issues #1-4, Aug. 2015) RoboCop: Dead Or Alive Volume Two (collects issues #5-8, Feb. 2016) The Complete Frank Miller RoboCop Omnibus (collects RoboCop Vol. 1-3, Dec. 2016) RoboCop: Dead Or Alive Volume Three (collects issues #9-12 ...
RoboCop also appears in a video game adaption of RoboCop 3. RoboCop appears as one of the central characters in RoboCop Versus The Terminator. RoboCop reappears in a 2003 reboot video game adaption of the original RoboCop film. RoboCop is parodied in the shooter game Broforce as a playable character known as Brobocop. His weapon is a blaster ...
In the game, RoboCop, a cyborg police officer in Neo Detroit, is tasked with finding the people responsible for the spread of a new designer drug known as Brain Drain. Simultaneously, RoboCop is tasked with investigating connections between a mayoral candidate, Omni Consumer Products (the creator of RoboCop), and Brain Drain. [1]