![]() ![]() The thrift stores I've checked don't have it. No, I'm currently looking for a cheap copy of this game. These games come with black-and-white instruction manuals that usually mention Majesco in the fine print.ĭo you have this one? Are you selling yours? Majesco produced a wide variety of game reprints for the North American Genesis, Game Gear, and SNES in the late 90s to gain a small profit from the systems' no longer profitable state of being. ![]() They usually used old Acclaim cartridge cases and covered the logo with a plain black sticker. That is a reprint cartridge produced by Majesco. I can still feel and almost see the Acclaim logo, though). Perhaps in order to mask-out the Acclaim logo altogether. There is, indeed, a sticker over the Acclaim logo but, like many other Disney games I've seen, It is entirely black (I don't believe it's been corroded, but rather, the original color. P.S.> Check-out my new thread on 2D Side-Scrolling Platformers for the Sega Genesis. I've played it through once, but haven't found anything yet. This lead me to believe that, if the hardware was different, then the software it contained might be as well. Begining with the fourth location, these are grouped as 6/2/4/1, respectively (with 6/4/6 locations emptied, respectively, after the first 6 pins). What struck me most (in fact, the first time) was that the frontal pin arrangement is not the same: It is "missing" several (I assume unnecessary) pins. Question: Do you claim to have seen a sticker that reads "Virgin" in the back? (if not in this game, perhaps in another?)īTW, there's much more to it than the casing itself. ![]() ![]() Do you have this one? Are you selling yours? I own a loose cartridge version of it, but I want to sell it and acquire a mint CIB. And, you're right, it is an Acclaim casing. It reads "Assembled in Mexico," and, it isn't in the back, it is rather "stamped" in the front on the label itself. I have a few Disney/Virgin games that are in Acclaim cartridge cases with this sticker on them. Primarily, my initial aversion to Sonic on SMS/Game Gear was that the blue fur wouldn't spin.I WANT HIM TO SPIN! Well, same disappointment I had when I played Sonic Advance.Is it me, or do the characters feel a bit too nintendo-nized nowadays!)Īnyways.Disney's Aladdin for the SEGA GENESIS/MD RULES !!!!!ĭoes the back of the cartridge have a "Virgin Made In Mexico" sticker slapped over the Acclaim logo? Acclaim helped Virgin distribute games in North America at one point. (REGARDING GAME GEAR- I love Game Gear as much as I love SMS, the thing is that I had to grow accustomed to the 8-bit graphics and gameplay of both with games also found in the Genesis, which took me a long time to do. BUT, the biggest disappointment came when I played the game gear version (same disappointment I had when I played the sonic "ports"-if they deserve to be called ports). I also played one of the game boy versions, what a disappointment. Adding to it, the graphics, animation, music and responsive controls made it rise above the rest (at least for me). What makes the genesis game so good is the tremendously smooth gameplay seldom achieved during the 16-bit era. This is, by far, way SUPERIOR to the SNES version. I gotta get me another copy (There is a black & white version of the manual that came later with the cartridge plastic label in the back reading MADE IN MEXICO (NOT USA).īTW, I forgot to say this. I once got so good at it that I could beat it all the way till the end in DIFFICULT mode without loosing a single bit of "Genie-Smoke." When in practice mode, I wouldn't use a single apple unless the final boss required it and still wouldn't loose "Genie-Smoke"! Gosh, just three or four days ago (after almost 10 years) I plugged it in on NORMAL and managed to beat it without loosing one single life. I love this game so much I ended-up owning about four copies.Just to get a Fine Mint CIB in the end (which happened not very long ago). ![]()
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