Fire Pro Wrestling G Translation Patch

  1. Fire Pro Wrestling G Translation Patch
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Reading Aeana's thread and ethelred's thread has reminded me that there is a plethora of obscure games that were never released in NA. Currently, we're actually quite spoiled when it comes to Japanese releases and it's getting to the point where we bitch and moan when a single game of even minor status fails to be localized.

This wasn't always the case of course. Back in the SNES days and earlier it seemed like most games weren't localized, regardless of the prestige of the title. Dragon Quest 6 for example I recall getting a rather large preview in Nintendo Power but it never arrived on North American shores. Seiken Densetsu 3 could easily have been brought to NA as Secret of Mana 2, but it never made it.Thankfully the translation of many of these titles continues, as shown with the recent finished translation of Dragon Quest 3 for the Super Famicom.I had never heard of the two titles previously mentioned before the GAF threads were made about them and so I'm wondering what other ones I might have missed and which I should seek out. What are the very best titles, Famicom, Super Famicom, Megadrive etc that have translations and are worth having a look at?From the Treasure of the Rudras thread charlequin mentioned:Of course there are interesting games that haven't been translated yet as well.

I've always been intrigued by (Marvelous: Another Treasure Island) which was Eiji Aonuma's first game before moving on to work on the Legend of Zelda series. Unfortunately to my knowledge the game hasn't been translated. Are there any games that you still are wishing and waiting for a localization? Let me expand that list a little bit in one convenient, helpful location for you. I see you already copied my post about SNES RPGs, so I'll focus on other stuff now.:lolTales of Phantasia (, ) - the very first Tales ever. Also a good list!

There was actually a US release of this, but only on the GBA. The SNES original was Japan-only, oddly enough. But yeah, the translation patch will help with that.As for the thread, romhacking.net's database is the place to look. They don't have absolutely every translation patch, but they have a lot of them, and you can do things like search for only completed patches, etc. There are huge numbers especially for the NES and SNES, but a bunch of other platforms have at least a few.

I could list stuff, but wouldn't know where to begin (or end, more like, given how my lists usually go. I'll mention something, though. Of the lesser-known fan-translated games out there, Dark Lord (NES) and Dark Law (SNES) are pretty interesting games well worth trying.

They are unique, somewhat western-style JRPGs with some unique game mechanics and interesting design. Use a guide though, they're quite confusing.

Final fantasy 7 ultima edition trainer pc. They're actually really interesting games. You go create character(s) from a couple of classes, go through the town in menus, find a quest (guides are helpful here particularly for the NES one, to help you with which order to do them in.), then go do it. In the quests you wander around, and if you get into a fight it uses strategic-style combat in a limited section of the overworld; there is no separate battle screen. You can't run from battle, so you'd better win.

Fire Pro Wrestling G Translation Patch

The battle controls are simple, with just attack, block, item, etc, but you also have to move around and have movement ranges, and there are obstacles and walls and such, so there's a definite strategic component. Both games are also pretty challenging, as you might expect.

Interesting stuff, though. In the second one (on SNES), there are even some graphic adventure elements. Don't be obtuse. Fire Emblem 1 was already remade once, and in the process of that remaking, an entire additional story was added on. If you then, over a decade later, go back and remake just that one original piece. It's half a game. I don't care about the distinction between 1 and 3.

We have one remake of Fire Emblem 1 with better visuals, a better translation, and better gameplay but missing half a game, and another remake of Fire Emblem 1 with a full story but weaker visuals and gameplay features. It's an enormously disappointing situation and Nintendo really fucked up handling the DS game the way they did.

Fire Pro Wrestling G Translation Patch 2017

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Don't be obtuse. Fire Emblem 1 was already remade once, and in the process of that remaking, an entire additional story was added on. If you then, over a decade later, go back and remake just that one original piece. It's half a game. I don't care about the distinction between 1 and 3. We have one remake of Fire Emblem 1 with better visuals, a better translation, and better gameplay but missing half a game, and another remake of Fire Emblem 1 with a full story but weaker visuals and gameplay features. It's an enormously disappointing situation and Nintendo really fucked up handling the DS game the way they did.

Fire Pro Wrestling G Translation Patch Free

Nintendo's selling Marios 1, 2, 3, Lost Levels, and World all separately on Virtual Console, instead of combined as we got on the SNES with All-Stars + World. Ninja Gaiden Trilogy for SNES isn't there, just the three NES versions. Now there are advantages and disadvantages to those compilations, but the point is, Nintendo has been consistent these past few years in releasing each title by itself only, if it ever was sold separately. And they aren't the only ones, Sega now has three Space Harrier titles on Virtual Console, only one of which is actually worth getting. Both the Sega and NEC versions of a bunch of Wonder Boy games, etc.So yeah, it's sort of half of a game.

But it's also a whole game, and that's the only thing today's Nintendo really cares about.(You could say that Fire Emblem 3 is a bit different because of how the second part wasn't also sold separately, but given that this is just the first part, which had been sold separately, I don't think that that really applies. Though it does mean that if they remade 3 and just put it by itself, it really would be half of a game, by any definition of the term.).

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