One of those many arcade games that reminds me of my tender youth. Sometimes I still play it thanks to an emulator, it's just great. I absolutely love it, and I'll never get tired of it, that's for sure.
Pra quem sempre teve dúvida do que os chefes dizem, vou tentar ajudar: CHEFE 1: É hora de pagar - Me enterre com meu dinheiro CHEFE 2: Saca a arma peregrino - Me pegou CHEFE 3: Tu tá com um problemão - To com um problemão CHEFE 4: Vamos te estourar - Isso foi um estouro CHEFE 5: Adeus amigo - Adeus amigo CHEFE 6: Te prepara pro estouro - To estourado (Não atira no meu irmão, ele só tá seguindo ordens) (Ok madame, a gente não vai atirar nele) CHEFE 7: Aye Chihuahua [sei lá o que é isso!!] - Até a tchau tchau (?) CHEFE 8: Tchau velho amigo - Eu digo, um pouco de azar!
That. Was. AWESOME! Ok, I know no one wants to hear this, but the game isn't exactly PC. There's plenty of blame to be thrown around, not least of which is the US's very own representation of the Wild West looks like, so I can't exactly ignore the game's problems from that aspect. That said, and I say this without any irony, I'd sooner play this over something like Red Dead Redemption. Retro arcade style, tough to master and the awesome soundtrack going with the stylised visuals, I can only count the many ways I prefer it over other games, not least of which even the bare bones plot gives me something to think about over whatever melodrama passes for story in far too many modern games. I'm probably just being nostalgic. However, I remember a time where action games were filled with action and graphics meant making your game look stylistically unique over the same failed attempts at emulating realism over and over and over again. Modern game design is awesome, but I hoped it wasn't style over substance padded with making grass look pretty and stories existing just to pad out gameplay time.
This game is Sunset Riders for the Super Nintendo. The SNES version is quite different than the Genesis or Arcade versions, due to Nintendo wanting to censor prostitutes and racial insensitivies. I grew up with this game and still have my original cartridge! It's hard though. I also feel its got the BEST music on the Super Nintendo, and has the best music compared to its other versions.
I liked the upgraded arcade version, my favorite part is when there's this girl who throws dynamite at you, I always grabbed the dynamite, held it a little and threw it back, the girl then ran to grab it again and blew in her face rofl. And what's with the long ass skirts of the dancers? Arcade version has pantyshots