Darkstalkers/Vampire saviour
Its not all vampires but it has them and some other crazy characters.
Good Vampire Games?
- Rurouni_Fencer
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Re: Good Vampire Games?
a little late, but...Droid party wrote:Oh lord I hope that was a photoshop and not a real product.dsheinem wrote:

From my own personal collection, (girlfriend's teen sister's contribution.) Both the GF and her sister are hardcore Twilight fans and even they hate that game...
Re: Good Vampire Games?
But there's an exclusive offer inside!
Anyway, what about Nosferatu for the Super Nintendo?
And if you like point-and-clicks, there's the Dracula: Resurrection series on PC.
Oh, and what about Night Trap?
Anyway, what about Nosferatu for the Super Nintendo?
And if you like point-and-clicks, there's the Dracula: Resurrection series on PC.
Oh, and what about Night Trap?
Re: Good Vampire Games?
There's also the Transylvania series of old adventure games. I remember playing the first one for about fifteen minutes as a child. I thought it was amazingly cool at that time, since I think it was the first graphic adventure game I had ever played.
Systems: TI-99/4a, Commodore Vic-20, Atari 2600, NES, SMS, GB, Neo Geo MVS (Big Red 4-slot), Genesis, SNES, 3DO, PS1, N64, DC, PS2, GBA, GCN, NDSi, Wii
Re: Good Vampire Games?
Oh god, not Dracula Resurrection. I tried to play that turd once. I wanted to kill myself within 20 minutes. It's awful.Ack wrote:But there's an exclusive offer inside!
Anyway, what about Nosferatu for the Super Nintendo?
And if you like point-and-clicks, there's the Dracula: Resurrection series on PC.
Oh, and what about Night Trap?
Marurun wrote:Don’t mind-shart your pants, guys
Re: Good Vampire Games?
I think it would be easier to list bad vampire games, as there are more of them.
Re: Good Vampire Games?
Naturally, I know about Castlevania I-IV and Symphony of the Night, but I haven't played any of the PS2 ones. Anyone recommend any of those?
So far I played through some Blood Rayne. It's pretty fun, but from what I can tell, it's more about breast physics than vampires (not that there's anything wrong with that).
I tried Vampire: The Masquerade- Redemption for just a bit, which looks ok so far. Will need to play more.
I also downloaded the demo for Dracula: Origins. Will try later.
Twilight: Scene It...... Noes. (The plural of "no" because one "no" is not enough).
So far I played through some Blood Rayne. It's pretty fun, but from what I can tell, it's more about breast physics than vampires (not that there's anything wrong with that).
I tried Vampire: The Masquerade- Redemption for just a bit, which looks ok so far. Will need to play more.
I also downloaded the demo for Dracula: Origins. Will try later.
Twilight: Scene It...... Noes. (The plural of "no" because one "no" is not enough).
My contributions to the Racketboy site:
Browser Games ... Free PC Games ... Mixtapes ... Doujin Games ... SotC Poetry
Browser Games ... Free PC Games ... Mixtapes ... Doujin Games ... SotC Poetry
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Gamerforlife
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Re: Good Vampire Games?
I've played Castlevania:Lament of Innocence. It was alright. What I really enjoyed about it was the story. It basically tells you how the Castlevania story began and how the Belmonts became hunters of Dracula
It's not a bad game, if you can find it cheap somewhere
It's not a bad game, if you can find it cheap somewhere
RyaNtheSlayA wrote:
Seriously. Screw you Shao Kahn I'm gonna play Animal Crossing.
- Rurouni_Fencer
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Re: Good Vampire Games?
Lament is recommended alone for it's soundtrack, (Michiru Yamane at her best IMO,) and the atmosphere inside the castle is fantastically gothic as well. If you like Castlevania, you need to see how it all began for the Belmont family.
But if you're going for better gameplay in an action game, Curse of Darkness improves Lament in a bunch of ways. Whips are traded for swords, magic plays a more prominent role, and the familiar assistants give the game more of a dynamic to work with than just "attack bad guys with one weapon, power up said weapon - rinse and repeat." The story also contains better voice acting, and follows up on the story from Castlevania III: Dracula's Curse, (Developer Igarashi's personal favorite game.) A very nice followup, and, just like Lament, criminally under-appreciated.
With Lords of Shadow just around the corner, (and looking to be 3D Castlevania at it's best and most acclaimed,) checking out Lament of Innocence and Curse of Darkness is a great move - if nothing else just to see how far the 3D journey has come thus far..
But if you're going for better gameplay in an action game, Curse of Darkness improves Lament in a bunch of ways. Whips are traded for swords, magic plays a more prominent role, and the familiar assistants give the game more of a dynamic to work with than just "attack bad guys with one weapon, power up said weapon - rinse and repeat." The story also contains better voice acting, and follows up on the story from Castlevania III: Dracula's Curse, (Developer Igarashi's personal favorite game.) A very nice followup, and, just like Lament, criminally under-appreciated.
With Lords of Shadow just around the corner, (and looking to be 3D Castlevania at it's best and most acclaimed,) checking out Lament of Innocence and Curse of Darkness is a great move - if nothing else just to see how far the 3D journey has come thus far..
Re: Good Vampire Games?
Having beaten both Lament of Innocence and Curse of Darkness, I agree that both are excellent titles and well worth checking out. And with the many unlockables that appear in both titles, there's a lot of replay value in both. They're solid 3D Castlevanias, unlike a certain pair of N64 titles that haven't been mentioned yet and hopefully won't be.Rurouni_Fencer wrote:Lament is recommended alone for it's soundtrack, (Michiru Yamane at her best IMO,) and the atmosphere inside the castle is fantastically gothic as well. If you like Castlevania, you need to see how it all began for the Belmont family.
But if you're going for better gameplay in an action game, Curse of Darkness improves Lament in a bunch of ways. Whips are traded for swords, magic plays a more prominent role, and the familiar assistants give the game more of a dynamic to work with than just "attack bad guys with one weapon, power up said weapon - rinse and repeat." The story also contains better voice acting, and follows up on the story from Castlevania III: Dracula's Curse, (Developer Igarashi's personal favorite game.) A very nice followup, and, just like Lament, criminally under-appreciated.
With Lords of Shadow just around the corner, (and looking to be 3D Castlevania at it's best and most acclaimed,) checking out Lament of Innocence and Curse of Darkness is a great move - if nothing else just to see how far the 3D journey has come thus far..




