That being said, I say everyone should track down a ROM version of every one and try them for yourselves. Also, delete those ROMs within 24hours
Any love for Alex Kidd?
Re: Any love for Alex Kidd?
Personally, I've only liked Miracle World, the other ones seemed to deviate from the original that I played, and not in a good way. To me, the Genesis one is a crap attempt at re-making Miracle World and I could not take any enjoyment out of it.
That being said, I say everyone should track down a ROM version of every one and try them for yourselves. Also, delete those ROMs within 24hours
That being said, I say everyone should track down a ROM version of every one and try them for yourselves. Also, delete those ROMs within 24hours
Got: Atari 2600, Atari 7800Pro, Commodore 64, Odyssey 2, Sega Master System, NES, Genesis Models 1-3, Nomad, Game Gear, Sega CD Model 1, Sega 32x, SuperNES, GameBoys, GameBoy Pocket, GBC, Sega Saturn Model 2, GBA, Nintendo 64, Playstation, Sega Dreamcast, Playstation 2 Slim, Nintendo DS Lite, Xbox 360, Gamecube, PS3 Slim
- noiseredux
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Re: Any love for Alex Kidd?
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I wouldn't go as far to say it's better than Super Mario Bros. 3, though (that's somebody else's funeral
)
Alex Kidd in Shinobi World is a neat game too
I've only played Lost Stars briefly and didn't like it much - the graphics are yucky
I played a few levels of Alex Kidd in Enchanted Castle for the Genesis and thought it was an adequate platformer, but I definitely prefer Miracle World from what I played of the Genesis game.
I've always said this - considering the original Mario Bros. was the competition at the time. I've always considered Alex Kidd in Miracle World to be far and away the better game.alienjesus wrote:I absolutely love miracle world (enough that I calim its a better platformer than the original mario bros - yeah, I went there).
I wouldn't go as far to say it's better than Super Mario Bros. 3, though (that's somebody else's funeral
Alex Kidd in Shinobi World is a neat game too
I've only played Lost Stars briefly and didn't like it much - the graphics are yucky
I played a few levels of Alex Kidd in Enchanted Castle for the Genesis and thought it was an adequate platformer, but I definitely prefer Miracle World from what I played of the Genesis game.
- hashiriya1
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Re: Any love for Alex Kidd?
Glad to see there are other Alex Kidd fans. I guess it's mostly nostalgia for me, but I still think they are great games and I play them every so often.
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AppleQueso
Re: Any love for Alex Kidd?
this thread made me order Miracle World and Lost Stars just now off of ebay
Re: Any love for Alex Kidd?
I remember every single song from miracle world. It was built into my master system 2 when I was a kid (i still own it) and i remember everything from the game.
It does bring back bad memories too though ahah. I remember that game over tune like a nightmare. I would cry so hard after hours of gameplay to die inside the second castle.
And I mean cry so bad!! That's the main reason my mother thought videogames made me angry.
Great great game. So great I want to tattoo alex kidd on my arm sooner or later.
It does bring back bad memories too though ahah. I remember that game over tune like a nightmare. I would cry so hard after hours of gameplay to die inside the second castle.
And I mean cry so bad!! That's the main reason my mother thought videogames made me angry.
Great great game. So great I want to tattoo alex kidd on my arm sooner or later.
Re: Any love for Alex Kidd?
The Alex Kidd series was a fair series at best. The series was way ahead of its time, similar to Phantasy Star, and it didn't really generate a huge sprawling world-wide phenomenon like Mario and Sonic had. The Alex Kidd games, from what I remember, were open-ended platforming games, rather than linear platforming games.
In the Alex Kidd series, you could enter buildings and explore non-linear levels. They were almost like side-scrolling sandbox games. Well, at least Alex Kidd In The Enchanted Castle was like a sandbox game. You could: buy items, attack enemies, hunt for cash, and use vehicles. There were even mini-games scattered around the world.
I hadn't played any of the games in that series very much, and I actually hadn't played one until: Sonic's Ultimate Genesis Collection. The games in the series have somewhat become: "cult classics". I do agree, though, that the games were fun and addictive.
In the Alex Kidd series, you could enter buildings and explore non-linear levels. They were almost like side-scrolling sandbox games. Well, at least Alex Kidd In The Enchanted Castle was like a sandbox game. You could: buy items, attack enemies, hunt for cash, and use vehicles. There were even mini-games scattered around the world.
I hadn't played any of the games in that series very much, and I actually hadn't played one until: Sonic's Ultimate Genesis Collection. The games in the series have somewhat become: "cult classics". I do agree, though, that the games were fun and addictive.
- hashiriya1
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Re: Any love for Alex Kidd?
TabJSR wrote:The Alex Kidd series was a fair series at best. The series was way ahead of its time, similar to Phantasy Star, and it didn't really generate a huge sprawling world-wide phenomenon like Mario and Sonic had. The Alex Kidd games, from what I remember, were open-ended platforming games, rather than linear platforming games.
In the Alex Kidd series, you could enter buildings and explore non-linear levels. They were almost like side-scrolling sandbox games.
Which Alex Kidd games were you playing? They're ALL linear.
Enchanted Castle is not really an Alex Kidd game, it was a Japanese girls game called "Anmitsu Hime" with modified sprites for the overseas versions.
Re: Any love for Alex Kidd?
Well let's say MOSTLY linear. The castle levels actually weren't linear in Miracle World. You had to go exploring sometimes!hashiriya1 wrote:TabJSR wrote:The Alex Kidd series was a fair series at best. The series was way ahead of its time, similar to Phantasy Star, and it didn't really generate a huge sprawling world-wide phenomenon like Mario and Sonic had. The Alex Kidd games, from what I remember, were open-ended platforming games, rather than linear platforming games.
In the Alex Kidd series, you could enter buildings and explore non-linear levels. They were almost like side-scrolling sandbox games.
Which Alex Kidd games were you playing? They're ALL linear.
Enchanted Castle is not really an Alex Kidd game, it was a Japanese girls game called "Anmitsu Hime" with modified sprites for the overseas versions.
Re: Any love for Alex Kidd?
I played the first one and I wouldn't say it is better gameplay than Super Mario. It is technically superior and the vehicles are cool but the handling doesn't feel as "right". I dislike the boss fights with RPS as well.
IMO it is a nice game, not a great one. If you remade it it wouldn't do that well. The remakes of Super Mario Bros hold up well.
Ivo.
IMO it is a nice game, not a great one. If you remade it it wouldn't do that well. The remakes of Super Mario Bros hold up well.
Ivo.


