![]() ![]() The original Shining Force was developed by Climax, but the next two sequels were developed by Sonic! Software Planning which later changed their name to Camelot due to often being mistaken for Sonic Team.Īfter the final battle has been won and the credits have rolled, if the player lets the game sit on the closing scene for about five minutes, they can access a secret hidden battle. The second in Sega's strategy RPG series. Incidentally, when Sega sponsored J.League team JEF United Ichihara, they used that same Sonic logo on the shirt. One of the first slew of titles to sport the J.League license, which had only just been established.Īt the splash screen, a soccer-kicking Sonic messes with the Sega logo. There is also a ten-minute time limit to complete each level, treasure chests that act like item boxes, and golden emeralds to collect.Ī soccer game from Sega. The levels of the game are divided into "acts", much like Sonic games, and many of the levels themselves are streamlined to sprint across easily, most notably the first level, which resembles Emerald Hill Zone from Sonic the Hedgehog 2. Havoc's design greatly resembles Sonic's and Bridget's resembles Amy's. ![]() He also appears alongside the Sega logo at the beginning of the game.Īn action-adventure platformer about a pirate seal named Havoc (Captain Lang in the Japanese release) who must rescue his sidekick Tide and the damsel Bridget from the evil pirate walrus Bernardo, who is trying to find Emeralda (essentially a Chaos Emerald). Sonic appears in several icon graphics in the main menu. Multiple Sonic posters appear on buildings in the background of level 2.Ī soccer game from Rage Software. Sonic advertisements can be seen on the court borders.Ī platform action game based on Tom & Jerry: The Movie. Sonic billboards line the sides of the Imola track.Ī sports title based on the most famous tennis event in the world. In one of the puzzles, a photo of Sonic is shown.Īn F1 racing game from Domark. Only released in Europe.Ī collection of Where's Waldo puzzles. In the Sega Mega Drive version, Sonic and Tails fly by in a pair of Tornado planes and sprinkle the Sega logo onto the screen.Ī collection of four sports-themed minigames. Giant Sonic billboards line the side of the track in the first area. Two years later, the game was ported to the Mega Drive. The game was released in a dual cabinet that could be linked with up to three others for a total of eight players. The third iteration of Yu Suzuki's seminal 1986 racing game, OutRun. In the world championship mode, Sonic runs across the bottom of the screen at the rival select menu. Sonic appears in three poses as "paste" graphics.Ī Monaco GP racing game featuring the name and likeness of six time winner Ayrton Senna. Sonic occasionally appears on the megatron after a touchdown is scored.Ī Sega digital art game similar to Wacky Worlds Creativity Studio. Joe Montana II Sports Talk Football (1991)Ī football game with copious amounts of digitized speech. ![]() Hit the ball high enough and a glimpse can be caught of Sonic on the billboards above the stadium. The game infringes on the copyrights of multiple video game characters. There is a Sonic ornament hanging from the rear-view mirror, making this Sonic's first cameo appearance as well as his first ever appearance in a video game.Ī platforming game from New Bits on The Ram (also known as Factor 5). Rad Mobile was released five months before the original Sonic the Hedgehog was. I know there's stuff that looks similar, but can't realistically take place in the same setting because the relationship between humans and cartoons is different (Cool World, Space Jam, that Rocky and Bullwinkle movie, Go! Go! Hypergrind, Garfield Gets Real), although conceivably they could take place in a separate cartoons-are-real universe of their own.A cross-country racing game by Sega AM3 similar to OutRun, and Sega's first game on the System 32 hardware. Those old Cartoon Network and Nickelodeon promos that everybody loves.Animaniacs and its spin-offs (Pinky and the Brain Pinky, Elmyra, and the Brain).Who Framed Roger Rabbit and all related media (like the novels and comics).For fun, I'm trying to list all the different media that operates under that conceit. This is something Mametchi and I were talking about the other night: after Who Framed Roger Rabbit came out in 1988, for decades there was this conceit in various media that cartoon characters were real people and actors in cartoons, as in the premise of that movie. ![]()
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