
Fantavision real name movie#
Control the excellently named Stick Breitling (the standard man character), Linda Rotta (the standard woman character) or Rikiya Busujima (a ki wielding force of nature who resembles a 1970's Japanese crime movie archetype, specifically actor Yusaku Matsuda) and prevent the confusion in the city during a zombie outbreak. The light-gun theme (and first-person viewpoint) is dropped in favor of a beat-em-up style of gameplay similar to Sega's own Dynamite Cop, released the previous year. Unfortunately, Zombie Revenge is the weakest spinoff of the franchise. The game is full of setpieces and novel situations, like this deathtrap room There's still a whole lot of shooting for a beatemup However, once in a while Sega likes to mix it up and we'll get a strange spinoff title such as the The Typing of the Dead, The Pinball of the Dead, the odd minigame collection (featuring two zombies in love!) House of the Dead EX, and today's exhibit, 1999's Naomi/Dreamcast title Zombie Revenge. Every one of the light games absolutely rules.



Most of the franchise plays it straight move through a variety of locations on rails, clowning on zombies and mutants with a fun and satisfying selection of firearms. Think of it as a good version of Crypt Killer (does anyone besides me think about Crypt Killer?). Known mostly its over the top horror atmosphere, location-specific enemy damage and absolutely ludicrous voice acting, HotD is one of the elder statesmen of the light-gun genre.
