![]() The original Japanese version includes Cutie Q (1979) in other regions (including North America and Europe), it was replaced with Super Pac-Man (1982, Japanese version). ![]() The following games appear across all regions: Pac-Man (alongside most of the other games) feature minor differences from the original titles. Because of this, the "Namco Museum" versions of Pac-Man and Ms. The actual games included were ported from the source code of the original arcade versions, and are not based on pure emulation. Each game also features a 3D animated intro, where Pac-Man travels throughout the different included games' locations. Future installments (including Namco Museum Encore) dropped the museum content entirely, instead solely focusing on the included games. The original five PS1 games feature many extra content, and are navigated like a true "museum". While all volumes were published by Namco themselves, the majority of their development was outsourced to two "ghost developer" companies: Now Production and TOSE. An "encore" volume was also released exclusively in Japan, but it does not have any Pac-Man games. Each volume has a letter on its front case, and spells out "NAMCO" when all five are lined up. Namco Museum originated on the PlayStation in the form of five volumes. Namco Museum installments PlayStation series 2.2.2 Namcot Collection (cartridge version).2.2.1 Namcot Collection (download version). ![]()
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |
AuthorWrite something about yourself. No need to be fancy, just an overview. ArchivesCategories |