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Ninja turtles games
Ninja turtles games




ninja turtles games

In the second half of Mission 2, the Turtles dive into the Hudson River to find and disarm a total of eight time bombs that have been planted at a dam. Captured Turtles can be rescued starting in Mission 3, though only one Turtle can be freed per level. A Turtle who runs out of health, falls into a fatal trap such as a fire pit, or is run over by a Roller Car, is not actually killed instead, he is captured by the enemy, losing whatever special items he had acquired. A screen accessed with the Start button shows a summary of each Turtle's health and whatever special weapon he has picked up, a map grid of the current area (not available inside Mission 6, the Technodrome), and messages from either Splinter or April O'Neil. The player can also acquire weapons and special items, and collect pizza to restore health. Once inside a sewer or a building, the player encounters enemy characters such as Fire Freaks (beings of living fire), additional Foot Soldiers (who jump, kick, and throw shurikens), and Mousers. However, the Turtle can strike back with his weapon or, in Mission 3, either missiles or cannon fire from the Party Wagon. Enemies can attack the player while exploring in the overhead view Foot Soldiers, Roller Cars (effectively steam rollers), and in later missions, even aircraft can assault the player. The gameplay in Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles begins with an overhead view used for navigating around the mission map, switching to a side view whenever the Turtle being controlled enters a manhole or a building, similar to Castlevania and Zelda II: The Adventure of Link.

ninja turtles games

It was taken off the Wii Shop Channel on January 26, 2012.

ninja turtles games

The game was ported to various home computer platforms in 1990 the original NES version was ported to Nintendo's Pla圜hoice-10 arcade system in 1991, and the Wii's Virtual Console service in 2007. This was the first Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles video game, and is based on the 1987 TV series, which was in its third season at the time of the game's original release, although the art style more resembles the original TMNT comic series. The game was released in Japan through Konami themselves, then in North America through Konami's Ultra Games imprint, followed by a release through the European equivalent, Palcom Software, in PAL regions. Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles, originally released as Fierce Turtle Ninja Legend in Japan and later as Teenage Mutant Hero Turtles in Europe, is a 1989 platform game for the Famicom/NES. Unfortunately, this game is cur­rent­ly available only in this ver­si­on. The following emulators are a­vai­lab­le for this game: NeptunJS (Ja­va­Script), Nesbox (Flash), Ret­ro­Games (JS) and vNES (Java).






Ninja turtles games