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The entire wikipedia with video and photo galleries for each article. Road Blaster (ロードブラスター) is a 1985 interactive movie video game produced by Data. The RRR Gang Leader is the primary antagonist of the 1985 interactive movie arcade game 'Road Blaster' (ロードブラスター), also known as 'Road Avenger' and 'Road Prosecutor'. The unnamed boss of the violent biker gang RRR., she kills the wife of an SCP cop on their wedding day, in an attempt to murder.
Arcade version screenshotThe objective is to complete all 50 rallies without running out of fuel. The player's car is equipped with a cannon that can be used to destroy enemy vehicles and roadside gun turrets for extra points. A scoring multiplier is set to 1 at the start of each rally and slowly increases if the player drives for a certain length of time without being hit.A helicopter occasionally flies overhead and drops a power-up item, which the player can pick up; these items have a limited number of uses. The player also encounters indestructible obstacles consisting of mines, boulders, floating 'spiker' balls, and oil slicks, the last of which will cause the player to lose control for a moment if hit.The player's car has two fuel tanks, a main tank and a smaller reserve.
If the main tank runs empty at any time, the car begins to use its reserve. Red (dropped by enemies destroyed from a distance) and green (appearing at specific milestones) globes on the road add small amounts of fuel to the main tank when picked up. Reaching the halfway point of a rally resets the main tank to the level it had at the start of that stage, but does not affect the reserve.
At the end of each rally, the main tank is refilled and fuel is added to the reserve based on the number of points scored in that stage.Contact with any enemy, projectile, or obstacle other than an oil slick destroys the player's car, removes any power-up in effect, and resets the scoring multiplier to 1. The player loses a small amount of fuel while a replacement car is put on the road. There is no limit to the number of times that the player's car can be destroyed and replaced; the game only ends when both the main and reserve fuel tanks are exhausted.The player may continue as many times as desired during the first 49 rallies, but is given only one chance to play the 50th and final one. Completing this rally awards a bonus of one million points and ends the game.Promotions A promotional giveaway was accessible on the original arcade version, where players could send in their name and 'personalized secret code' after completing rally 50 and receive a free RoadBlasters T-shirt.
The promotion ended August 31, 1987.The game had a toy tie-in made. The toys were die-cast cars that could be customized with armor, lasers, machine guns, and rocket launchers and jet engines.
There were two factions: Turbo Force and The Motor Lords. There also were play sets such as a mobile command base. Reception. This section needs expansion. You can help.
( September 2012)ReceptionReview scoresPublicationScore84%5/1020/25 (Lynx)9/10 (Lynx)81%8/1072%65462%75%Power Play (DE)75%58%45%80% (NES)84% (Lynx)In a capsule review of the Lynx version for, praised the game's massive length and combination of 'standard racing with heaps of action.' He added that 'If you liked Roadblasters on another system, you won't be disappointed in the Lynx version.' CVG Magazine also reviewed the Atari Lynx version of the game, Julian Rignall went on to say 'Roadblasters is a challenging game and is technically superb, with stunning graphics and great speech.' He said it was fun but the levels were frustrating finally giving it a rating of 76 out of 100.In a review of the Lynx version, Robert A. Jung concluded, 'This is a mind-blowing awesome adaptation. I'd recommend it to most video-game players - fans of driving games, fans of shooting games, fans of action games, and fans of the arcade original.
It's a challenging, well-balanced arcade/action game, faithful to the original, worthy of the Lynx and offering lots of hours of fun.This goes right up there with Blue Lightning as one of the best Lynx games around.' He gave a score of 9 out of 10. Legacy The game appeared on the Sony PlayStation compilation in 1998. It was also released for the PlayStation 2, Xbox, GameCube and PC as part of the arcade game compilation.A port can be played in via an Arcade Dock in the level 'The Phantom Zone.'
The game made an appearance in the movie as the game Turbo, the main antagonist, tries to commandeer, but ends up crashing it (as shown in his backstory). References. 'Video Shorts: Road Blasters.'
Vol.10, Pg.83. January/February 1990. The International Arcade Museum. Retrieved 4 Oct 2013.
(JPG). Retrieved 2017-01-04. Retrieved 2017-01-04. (JPG). Retrieved 2017-01-04. Retrieved 2017-01-04.
^ Robert A. Jung (6 July 1999). IGN Entertainment. Retrieved 16 August 2018.
Gideon (December 1990). P. 148. Smash TV rating, MegaTech issue 12, page 96, December 1992. Retrieved 2017-01-04. Retrieved 2017-01-04. Retrieved 2017-01-04. Retrieved 2017-01-04.
Julian Boardman (February 1991). Raze Magazine. Retrieved 16 August 2018 – via archive.org. (December 1990).
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Antic Publishing. P. 72. Julian Rignall (January 1991). CVG Magazine. Retrieved 24 March 2018. Cite magazine requires magazine=. Orland, Kyle (November 5, 2012).
Archived from on June 30, 2018. Retrieved November 12, 2018.External links. at the Arcade History database. at the.
at SpectrumComputing.co.uk.
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