Voice over is really well written, and this is a good topic, I think you're going to be successful. This is already better than the standard "port vs port" video and rivaling something like game sack or slx for writing if not visuals.
Hi Kyo, Excellent and very informative video you done with the comparision of Magician Lord for the MVS & AES. Thank you for sharing this with us. I posted this excellent upload for you up on the Neo-Geo Thread on the forums over on AtariAge for others to take notice and enjoy from you. Thank you again for sharing this with us Kyo. Hope to see more Neo-Geo content from you soon bro. 8^) Anthony...
You rock Anthony ! This is one of the most fun videos I produced in a while since most of the Neo-Geo Library is exemplary and cutting edge! How many people know Soccer Brawl has an actual story hidden inside it? Zippo. -Yours truly, Patrick
This and Sengoku are exceptions to the rule. Those have seperate ROMS due to the intro being entirely ripped from the MVS release! Very few games have seperate ROMS like this one.
Hahaha. So true Patrick. I agree wholeheartedly. I wish more of the newcomers will appreciate the Neo-Geo just like we do. Hopefully videos on RUclips like yours will do so and be enjoyed at the same time...Thank you for the reply back bro. What's next on the list Patrick? Will it be a shooter? Anthony...
Hamster's Neo Geo emulator is excellent, but they didn't include the home console ROM because it wasn't "Arcade". It's unfortunate but home consoles technically aren't arcades.
@@kyokusagani8869 That's why I enjoyed the M2 produced Neo-Geo Station release on the PS3, in 2013. It had many great features missing in Hamster's ACA Neo series. Including a slick intro, MVS vs AES selection, and JPN/USA/EU options, a nicely put together manual for each game, a music jukebox, with playlist options, and for each new NGS game you purchased, it added the game's OST to the main Jukebox on every Neo game on the PS3. It also offered online co-op play. It only really worked well if both players had a perfect high bandwidth, low ping connection, but when it worked it was glorious! It had movie recording options (not AVI, MPG, style, but it recorded your input presses, and could replay the entire game. This was fun, and I was able to save some co-op baseball games with my brother. We used to play NeoGeo together all the time in the early 90's. Also, word has it that Hamster is releasing ACA2 NeoGeo this fall for the PS5, and other current gen consoles. This will have online co-op, hopefully with AES/MVS options too.
MVS games in 1990 would cost an arcade owner $700-$800, whereas the AES home cart would cost between $120 and $170. When I bought my AES in 1990 I had an arcade owner come over to my house with his MVS carts to see if they had the same pinout. I originally called him to ask if he had Neo-Geo carts to rent. He owned a company which rented full sized arcade cabs and pinball machines, so I figured it was worth a try. He thought (for a brief moment) that he might be able to buy the cheaper AES carts for his MVS arcade systems. He agreed to let me borrow a few of them if they were interchangeable. We were both disappointed. I could have counted the pins and saved him a trip. :P
@@videogameobsession Magician Lord and Sengoku AES will have weird effects if forced into MVS mode. If you lower the difficulty to 1, which shouldn't be possible, you get an extra hit point for a total of four. Likewise, sengoku aes will cut off continues after the third.
Voice over is really well written, and this is a good topic, I think you're going to be successful. This is already better than the standard "port vs port" video and rivaling something like game sack or slx for writing if not visuals.
Hi Kyo,
Excellent and very informative video you done with the comparision of Magician Lord for the MVS & AES. Thank you for sharing this with us.
I posted this excellent upload for you up on the Neo-Geo Thread on the forums over on AtariAge for others to take notice and enjoy from you. Thank you again for sharing this with us Kyo. Hope to see more Neo-Geo content from you soon bro. 8^)
Anthony...
You rock Anthony ! This is one of the most fun videos I produced in a while since most of the Neo-Geo Library is exemplary and cutting edge! How many people know Soccer Brawl has an actual story hidden inside it? Zippo.
-Yours truly, Patrick
You can usually play either version if you have a unibios. Regardless if you have the MVS or AES cart
This and Sengoku are exceptions to the rule. Those have seperate ROMS due to the intro being entirely ripped from the MVS release! Very few games have seperate ROMS like this one.
Hahaha. So true Patrick. I agree wholeheartedly. I wish more of the newcomers will appreciate the Neo-Geo just like we do. Hopefully videos on RUclips like yours will do so and be enjoyed at the same time...Thank you for the reply back bro.
What's next on the list Patrick? Will it be a shooter?
Anthony...
Great stuff.Hope the series continues.
Solid work Kyo
Man, Neo Geo cartridges were huge. I think my Blu-Ray player is smaller than the carts.
Dope, I had no idea there was a story intro! I only ever played the Arcade Archives release.
Hamster's Neo Geo emulator is excellent, but they didn't include the home console ROM because it wasn't "Arcade". It's unfortunate but home consoles technically aren't arcades.
@@kyokusagani8869 That's why I enjoyed the M2 produced Neo-Geo Station release on the PS3, in 2013. It had many great features missing in Hamster's ACA Neo series. Including a slick intro, MVS vs AES selection, and JPN/USA/EU options, a nicely put together manual for each game, a music jukebox, with playlist options, and for each new NGS game you purchased, it added the game's OST to the main Jukebox on every Neo game on the PS3. It also offered online co-op play. It only really worked well if both players had a perfect high bandwidth, low ping connection, but when it worked it was glorious! It had movie recording options (not AVI, MPG, style, but it recorded your input presses, and could replay the entire game. This was fun, and I was able to save some co-op baseball games with my brother. We used to play NeoGeo together all the time in the early 90's.
Also, word has it that Hamster is releasing ACA2 NeoGeo this fall for the PS5, and other current gen consoles. This will have online co-op, hopefully with AES/MVS options too.
MVS games in 1990 would cost an arcade owner $700-$800, whereas the AES home cart would cost between $120 and $170. When I bought my AES in 1990 I had an arcade owner come over to my house with his MVS carts to see if they had the same pinout. I originally called him to ask if he had Neo-Geo carts to rent. He owned a company which rented full sized arcade cabs and pinball machines, so I figured it was worth a try. He thought (for a brief moment) that he might be able to buy the cheaper AES carts for his MVS arcade systems. He agreed to let me borrow a few of them if they were interchangeable. We were both disappointed. I could have counted the pins and saved him a trip. :P
@@videogameobsession Magician Lord and Sengoku AES will have weird effects if forced into MVS mode. If you lower the difficulty to 1, which shouldn't be possible, you get an extra hit point for a total of four. Likewise, sengoku aes will cut off continues after the third.
Good job ! Merci l'ami KyoKusagani ! ;)
You're welcome! I got the second episode coming out in a few days !
I can't wait ! ;)
I like this series
But there aren't another difference on the output video ? as rgb/vga for mvs and composite, rf signal for AES?
Lebsack Route