Tomcat Alley Sega Cd Review
The last hunt. But trouble begins to break the team apart when Charlie kills a group of Indians whom he accuses of stealing his horses. Charlies subsequent mistreatment of the lone survivors an Indian woman and her child forces Sandy to realize that his partner is consumed with hateand that he enjoys killing more than just buffalo.
Tomcat Alley | |
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Developer(s) | The Code Monkeys (Sega CD) Novotrade (PC) |
Publisher(s) | Sega |
Designer(s) | John Zuur Platten |
Platform(s) | Sega CD, Windows |
Release | Sega CDWindows 95
|
Genre(s) | Action, FMV game |
Mode(s) | Single-player |
Tomcat Alley is an interactive movie FMV video game developed by The Code Monkeys for Sega CD. It was the first, and only, Sega CD game to feature extensive full screen, full motion video. It was later released, with higher quality video, for Windows-based PCs. For Tomcat Alley on the Sega CD, GameFAQs has 1 FAQ (game guide/walkthrough), 4 reviews, 1 critic review, and 45 user screenshots.
Tomcat Alley is an interactive movieFMVvideo game developed by The Code Monkeys for Sega CD. It was the first Sega CD game to feature extensive full screen, full motion video.[1] It was later released, with higher quality video, for Windows-based PCs.[1] A 32X version was also in development,[2] but never released.
Storyline[edit]
Super smash bros brawl enemies. The player controls a United States Navy pilot who has to bring peace and stability to the world after the cash-poor former Soviet Union sold off some of its military equipment to an unfriendly government.
The game takes place in a full screen, full motion video, first-person perspective, and the player has to move quickly to launch missiles at enemy aircraft.
Critical reception[edit]
GamePro named Tomcat Alley the best Sega CD game at the 1994 Consumer Electronics Show, commenting, 'The demo at CES was stunning. It still had that grainy Sega CD look and feel, but you actually felt like you were flying inside the Tomcat.'[3] They later reviewed the game and gave it a perfect score, stating: 'Tomcat Alley uses actors, sets, and outstanding aerial footage to create a breathtaking aerial battlefield.'[4]Electronic Gaming Monthly gave the game a largely negative review: 'Aaargh, another full-motion video game! If you've played Night Trap or Double Switch, then you've played Tomcat Alley. .. the video [is] very blocky and often hard to see'.[1]
References[edit]
- ^ abcTomcat Alley on MobyGames
- ^'Gaming Gossip'. Electronic Gaming Monthly. Ziff Davis (66): 56. January 1995.
- ^'CES Showstoppers'. GamePro (57). IDG. April 1994. pp. 74–81.
- ^'ProReview: Tomcat Alley'. GamePro (58). IDG. May 1994. pp. 52–53.
External links[edit]
- Tomcast Alley at MobyGames