The Switch is just leaning into this whole doom thing.
Switch Online's NES library is picking up two games in August that haven't been seen in nearly three decades.
Arriving on the 21st of this month, August's releases are Vice: Project Doom and Kung-Fu Heroes for the west. Vice: Project Doom is a 1991-published action game from Sega owners Sammy, which is largely a run and gun cinematic action title but also includes overhead driving combat sequences and some first person shooting sequences. It was featured on the May 1991 cover of Nintendo Power, and has never been re-released until now.
Kung-Fu Heroes is a localized version of the Culture Brain-developed Super Chinese, which released on the NES in 1989. Its only rerelease before now was a Wii U Virtual Console launch only in Japan in 2014.
The Famicom library will sub out Vice: Project Doom for Downtown Nekketsu Koushinkyoku: Sore Yuke Dai-Undoukai, a 1990 game in the Kunio-Kun/River City series.
Is there a good logical reason that they trickle these games out so slowly?
Is there a good logical reason that they trickle these games out so slowly?
They probably plan on supporting the thing through out the systems life so the lineup is limited. Much of the NES library is filled with licensed games which are probably out of the question. Then you have Capcom and Konami releasing their biggest series in separate collections so they're not coming. Plus Nintendo themselves have already released most of their own NES games by now as well. So the amount of games that they can legally still add is probably much smaller then many think.
Hopefully with the upcoming Vice: Project Doom it means they're looking for hidden gems to make up for the lack of games each month.
Interesting. I have VICE but I never really tried it. Probably better to do so with save states.