

Which games are included? The game lineup will be substantially different depending on whether you own the western, Japanese or Asian version of the system, and the breakdown goes something like this: (The European version was delayed by two weeks, just like the good ol' days.) What's this? Sega's return fire at the NES and SNES Classic, featuring 40 classic first- and third-party Genesis/Mega Drive games, replica USB-equipped controllers (with 3 buttons overseas and 6 buttons in Japan and Asia), software emulation by the veterans at M2, menu music by Yuzo Koshiro, hardware design and production by Sega of Japan and a neat little volume slider that rattles when you shake the console, plus two brand-new, genuine-spec Mega Drive games to top it off: a fresh port of the infamously-rare Sega Tetris and a new port of Taito's late-'80s shooting game Darius, produced in collaboration with an intrepid Japanese hobbyist. Sega Genesis / Mega Drive Mini (North America, Australia/New Zealand and Japan) Helpful tip: The objectives for each stage may not be immediately obvious, so here they are: in the first stage, you need to collect all the carriages by reversing into them in the second stage, you need to stop and wait at each station until you've collected nine passengers in the third stage, you need to deliver the passengers to the UFO, one by one. Why should I care? Time Tunnel's idiosyncratic controls are fun to come to grips with, and the game ends just before it might have become too frustrating for its own good. What's this? An objective-based maze game of sorts, developed and distributed in arcades by Taito in 1982 players are challenged with navigating a train through three increasingly strange stages, with the relative forwards and backwards movement of the train controlled with the stick and a button used to flip the direction of the track at key points. Platform: Nintendo Switch, PlayStation 4 (worldwide).

No week has ever been a good week to be Devil May Cry 2 but wow, bad week to be Devil May Cry 2, huh? ARCADE ARCHIVES
