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Manic Game Girl (Joycast - PS1 - 2002)
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âManic Game Girlâ
[PS1] [SOUTH KOREA] [MAGAZINE] [2002]
via PlayStation DataCenter
Manic Game Girl is a half adventure, half beat-em-up hybrid game, where you assume a role of Amber, a college freshman who doesnât know a thing about video games, but becomes quite good at them once she brings the brand new console, Game Stealth, to her room. Soon enough, the city is overrun by terrorists also obsessed with video games, and Amber is selected as a resistance fighter against evil corporation responsible for this turmoil, which plans to take over the world by their equally evil video games. Itâs a noble concept, but thereâs a certain problem with their writing. Games with such meta premise has tried catering to their target audience in some way â Segagaga, a similar game with official Segaâs backup, had gone over their duty to include tons of minigames or others that references their products, and some like Neptunia, without that kind of support behind, utilized a load of tongue-in-cheek memes.
In case of Manic Game Girl, it also tries the same thing, but maybe the developers werenât that knowledgeable about video games, because the reference is kinda superficial and limited. You can try talk to students around the college, but the best they can offer is a short gossip that video games are awesome, without going into what and why they are. The game does feature some goofy titles â the first one is ridiculously sounding Otaku Crisis, which is apparently a million seller â but they donât seem to be based on any particular games. In fact, you donât actually get to play them, or even watch over someone playing them, which is rather a disappointment for a game like this. Probably the closest call to actual video games would be an amusement center nearby that hosts some arcade cabinets inside, although only one of them is playable, a rhythm minigame machine that doesnât sync to the music at all. ~ Ed Murphy, @hardcore-gaming-101
#gaming#advertising#manic game girl#ps1#playstation#brawlers#comedy#action#superheroes#joycast#south korea#video games#2002
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Manic Game Girl
Manic Game Girl is a mildly interesting piece of history that holds some unusual records behind it. First and foremost, itâs the only game ever developed and published in South Korea for the original PlayStation. The game was a pet project of Joycast, an infant company founded to exclusively deal with console affairs, tying to Sonyâs grand launch of PlayStation 2 on Asia at that time. It was a budget release, but nonetheless Joycast brought a good number of talents into the crew to kickstart this project. One of the key people was the main programmer Lee Hanjong, who used to work for Square USA where he contributed some programming works (his name appears in the credits of Parasite Eve). His expertise on the architecture might also has to do with its odd choice of the platform, which was by then in the twilight years.Â
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#hardcore gaming 101#review#ed murphy#manic game girl#joycast#playstation#ps1#beat em ups#korean#kusoge#video games#3d action games
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Manic Game Girl (Joycast - PS1 - 2002)
#some choice translation screenshots during my MGG play#i'll have to comb back through it to pick out more#Manic Game Girl#Korean games#PS1#PlayStation#32bit#32-bit#import games#imports#import#import game#korean#korean game#NPC#NPCs#Joycast
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Manic Game Girl (Joycast - PS1 - 2002)
#Now Streaming...#Manic Game Girl#Joycast#PS1#PlayStation#longplay#longplays#action games#beat em up#tokusatsu#korean games
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Manic Game Girl: Final Boss & Ending (Joycast - PS1 - 2002)
#Manic Game Girl#end boss#final boss#PS1#Joycast#32bit#32-bit#tokusatsu#end bosses#final bosses#zplayz#korean games#game endings#PlayStation
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Manic Game Girl (Joycast - PS1 - 2002)
#Manic Game Girl#korean games#Joycast#PS1#import games#NPC#32bit#32-bit#PlayStation#cosplay#games#gaming#anime#cosplaying#they are talking about going to 'E4'
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Manic Game Girl (Joycast - PS1 - 2002)
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Manic Game Girl (Joycast - PS1 - 2002)
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Manic Game Girl (Joycast - PS1 - 2002)
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Manic Game Girl (Joycast - PS1 - 2002)
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Manic Game Girl (Joycast - PS1 - 2002)
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Manic Game Girl (매ë ę˛ě 깸) - PlayStation (2002)
http://www.hardcoregaming101.net/manic-game-girl/
âManic Game Girl is a mildly interesting piece of history that holds some unusual records behind it. First and foremost, itâs the only game ever developed and published in South Korea for the original PlayStation. The game was a pet project of Joycast, a company founded to exclusively deal with console affairs in the country, tying to Sonyâs grand launch of PlayStation 2 on Asia at that time. It was a budget release, but nonetheless Joycast brought a good number of talents into the crew to kickstart this project. One of the key people was the main programmer Lee Hanjong, who used to work for Square USA where he contributed some programming works (his name appears in the credits of Parasite Eve). His expertise on the architecture might also has to do with its odd choice of the platform, which was by then in the twilight years.
Manic Game Girl is a half adventure, half beat-em-up hybrid game, where you assume a role of Amber, a college freshman who doesnât know a thing about video games, but becomes quite good at them once she brings the brand new console, Game Stealth, to her room. Soon enough, the city is overrun by terrorists also obsessed with video games, and Amber is selected as a resistance fighter against evil corporation responsible for this turmoil, which plans to take over the world by their equally evil video games.â
[webarchive page previewing the never released western version]
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