Steam installeren
inloggen
|
taal
简体中文 (Chinees, vereenvoudigd)
繁體中文 (Chinees, traditioneel)
日本語 (Japans)
한국어 (Koreaans)
ไทย (Thai)
Български (Bulgaars)
Čeština (Tsjechisch)
Dansk (Deens)
Deutsch (Duits)
English (Engels)
Español-España (Spaans - Spanje)
Español - Latinoamérica (Spaans - Latijns-Amerika)
Ελληνικά (Grieks)
Français (Frans)
Italiano (Italiaans)
Bahasa Indonesia (Indonesisch)
Magyar (Hongaars)
Norsk (Noors)
Polski (Pools)
Português (Portugees - Portugal)
Português - Brasil (Braziliaans-Portugees)
Română (Roemeens)
Русский (Russisch)
Suomi (Fins)
Svenska (Zweeds)
Türkçe (Turks)
Tiếng Việt (Vietnamees)
Українська (Oekraïens)
Een vertaalprobleem melden
I would never have thought about that had you not mentioned it. Amazing.
Yeah that game was, I would say good and crazy. Not a classic like Shadowman.
They even had reflections, and water looked amazing for the time.
In CD holder manuals, especially like the Shadowman one which gives nothing away, but explains all the back ground needed to understand the game from beginning.
I hope other players see your guide. That manual is great!
P.S. Due to marketing strategy, the Dreamcast sold only 5 million units in the USA.
They focused purely on the Japanese market, but at that time Japanese generally associated console only with PS. With the exception of N64. It sold terribly here. But it could have given the PS2 a run for it's money, but it was too late then. A shame.
I've gotta say I didn't know Shadow Man released on the Dreamcast, I bet that's gotta be exciting to play on the Dreamcast though huh? Very cool.
So this is great! The manual does a great job of explaining the background lore and the characters. I had forgotten how good and detailed some old games manuals were, packed with the disk. Shadowman is one of the best written 2 decades ago.
That's the one thing we lost with digital downloads - no hardcopy, detailed manual.
Much appreciated, thanks again.