They can counter your attacks even when yours are about to hit and theirs shouldn’t. They have tiny hitboxes while yours get big. The awful, unfair, horrible artificial intelligence. Thus, why the last boss LITERALLY REQUIRES YOU TO DECAPITATE THEM, AND IF YOU LOSE YOUR LIMBS YOU CANNOT ACCOMPLISH THIS!īut the absolute worst part of this horrid, rancid game? The A.I. But it gets better: barely adequate music and sound effects, laggy and slow gameplay, slippery and laggy controls, and repetitive gameplay haunt this title, which was basically farted out hoping to play off the success of Mortal Kombat. Time Killers does have some nice and colorful graphics, although hardly impressive by arcade standards of 1992: compared to the vibrant, well-animated Street Fighter 2 characters and the gorgeous rotoscoped sprites and lush backgrounds of Mortal Kombat, this game can’t quite measure up. Though this game is an absolute BLAST with two players (and I mean that!), as a single-player trial this was like banging your head on a brick wall hoping the lump that’s forming will begin to shrink. THIS WAS ON EASY, I REPEAT! And, even with unlimited credits, I was still hardly able to finish this atrocity.
This is possibly the most difficult game I’ve ever played, outside of perhaps Independence Day on PS1 or Wally Bear on NES. Mortal Kombat: Deadly Alliance (PlayStation 2)
Street Fighter: The Movie: The Game (Arcade) Street Fighter: The Movie: The Game (Sega CD)