Amazon.com: Batman: The Video Game: Made for Nes System, Mde by Sunsoft, Batman Nes: Video Games

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Batman: The Video Game
 
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Batman: The Video Game

by Sunsoft
Nintendo NES
4.4 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (9 customer reviews)

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Ships from and sold by The Fat Bloke.
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Product Details

  • ASIN: B0006TNCCI
  • Item Weight: 8 ounces
  • Media: Video Game
  • Release Date: 1989
  • Average Customer Review: 4.4 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (9 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #7,153 in Video Games (See Top 100 in Video Games)

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Product Description

This listing is for a Nes Video Game Version. Batman the Video game. Storyline: The citizens of GOTHAM CITY are busy planning the city's 200th Anniversary Festival, but there is not much to celebrate. Crime and violence rule the city. The only man who can free the city from THE JOKER'S evil clutches is the one and only - BATMAN! With your help, the CAPED CRUSADER can defeat THE JOKER and save the good people of GOTHAM CITY. BATMAN is armed with special weapons and acrobatic strength. He must destroy 15 different types of enemies and 5 bosses, while traveling through 5 stages. Finally, BATMAN comes face-to-face with THE JOKER! But who will prevail? It's up to you! --From the NES Batman instruction manual. Overview: Batman is based loosely on the Michael Keaton/Jack Nicholson movie. Batman is out to stop the Joker from terrorizing Gotham City. There are some cinema scenes between levels, that show the Batmobile driving around or confrontations with the Joker. The cut-scenes have nice graphics to look at. The in-game graphics are good, too. There are some quotes from the movie included, and much of the scenery came right from the movie, too, such as the Axis Chemical Plant, and Batman's final showdown against the Joker in the clock tower. The sounds were also reminiscent of the movie. The controls were a little tricky at first, but easy to use once you get used to them. The ability to make Batman jump off the walls was a really fun feature. This platformer based on the movie was definitely an exception to the rule that all games based on movies are crappy.

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Customer Reviews

9 Reviews
5 star:
 (5)
4 star:
 (3)
3 star:
 (1)
2 star:    (0)
1 star:    (0)
 
 
 
 
 
Average Customer Review
4.4 out of 5 stars (9 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews

3 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars One of the Best, November 30, 2009
= Fun:5.0 out of 5 stars 
This review is from: Batman: The Video Game (Video Game)
Batman for the nes is quite possibly one of the best sidescrolling games based off of a comic book liscense and sheer quality of this game is not often found with old games that are usually rushed to coincide with a movie's release date. Thiat is not the case here, what we have is a fun and challenging game that is leaps and bounds better than most of the nes competition.
For a game that's over twenty years old, the graphics are very detailed with lots of nice background effects like buzz saws spinning on the ground and the joker's face appearing on the computer moniters. Another cool effect is the spinning gears in the clock tower which also happens to be one of the most epic last levels in 8 bit. The only real problem graphically is that many of the middle levels don't really match the Batman theme very well and appear to be lifted from another game entirely whcih is really less of a complaint and more of a curiosity.
The gameplay is pitch perfect and the Batman handles in such a natural way.From the wall jumping to switching your three weapons on the fly, everything is mapped out to perfection. Many times playing this, I forgot I was even holding a controller, it really is that intuitive.
Last but certainly not least, there is the music. Each level has it's own melody that ranges from sweeping thatrical action compositions to moody more subtle sound. One thing is for certain, few nes games can manage to utilize the hardware and make the sound as quality as this. This here is a soundtrack that easily compares to megaman or castlevania and in case your new to 8 bit, that's a huge compliment.
Anyway, if you have an old nes lying around, dust it off and play this little gem. Even if your not a fan of Batman but can appreciate some old school platforming, this is worth checking out. Sunsoft really did a tremendous job on this one and it's a shame more people don't include this in their listmania lists because I would pick this up over super mario 2 any day of the week.
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3 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars The Dark Knight At His Pixelated Best, September 11, 2009
= Fun:5.0 out of 5 stars 
This review is from: Batman: The Video Game (Video Game)
There is no denying the fact that the Nintendo Entertainment System (NES) was, at its very best, a flawed piece of hardware. Gamers everywhere will remember all the tricks of the trade (blowing, pumping, squeezing, etc.) in order to get the games to boot up. Yet, for all its quirks, that system can never be accused of one thing: churning out classic games that entertained gamers for hours on end. "Batman" is one of those games.

Based on the 1989 film of the same name, this game follows the basic progression of the movie, including such levels as Gotham City, the sewer plant, Joker's television studio, and the Belltower. You play as the Caped Crusader who must dispose of a wide range of enemies (both on land and in the air) while also utilize some fancy jumping skills to scale tall buildings and reach key platforms.

I think that the real genius of the game, though, shines through in its perfectly designed difficulty curve. Though I consider "Punch-Out!" to be my all-time favorite NES game (with this one a close second), in that collection of pugilistic confrontations there is just too much difference between the hardest villain (Tyson/Dream) and the one that proceeded him (Super Macho Man). Basically, you can dominate the entire game and still get floored by Tyson/Dream quite regularly. Fortunately, Batman does not fall prey to that design flaw. Don't get me wrong...the game can be very difficult at times. Yet, the difficulty progresses in such a fashion that the skills learned in one stage will need to be mastered before you have any chance at the next one.

Also, on a bit of a side note, the music in this game is some of the best the NES ever produced. For those of you who are able to appreciate an 8-bit soundtrack, you will be able to listen to Batman's tunes all night long.

To conclude, I think that the true test of the success of this game comes from the fact that it has taken nearly two decades to produce another highly-rated Batman video game (the recently-released Arkham Asylum). All the iterations of the Dark Knight in between either suffered from bad controls, stupid story, or goofy graphics. Who would have thought that the best edition would come from a system as flawed as the NES?!
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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars The Best of the Bats? (1), December 17, 2009
= Fun:4.0 out of 5 stars 
This review is from: Batman: The Video Game (Video Game)
After so many years, I finally get to review this game on Amazon.com (wondering what took them so long to add this game). Let's get something straight right off the bat... er, whatever: if you have never played this game or even seen videos or screenshots and you want to play a game that faithfully creates an interactive experience of the 1989 movie, you're better off with the Genesis or Arcade version. What you'll get in the NES version is a story very loosely based on the movie with many stages and enemies you never saw in the movie. You'll fight robots, ninja turtles with flame throwers, spiky robotic bugs, tanks, a red ninja who looks somewhat like Ryu from Ninja Gaiden, a monkey that throws crescents at you, moving boxes, some guy with a jet pack in front of the Gotham Courthouse who throws fireballs and dives at you, some weird-ass machine, and ... this could go on for quite a while. While some of the stages may look slightly familiar (Gotham City streets, the Axis Chemicals factory, and the Cathedral), most look nothing like the movie: caves, power plants, the sewer, and an "art museum" that looks absolutely nothing like a museum, much less the one in the movie. The cathedral itself doesn't resemble the one in the movie much either, but at least you get to fight The Joker in the end, and yes he does look like The Joker.

So, in case you're still reading, you may be wondering why I rated it four stars. Because it's a hell of a lot of fun! That's why! As unfaithful to the movie as it is, this game is a blast to play with all the wall-jumping (don't worry; there's not too much of it), flying fists of fury, and enough challenge to make the game not too easy. You'll get infinite continues when you run out of lives and they only set you back to the first stage in the current chapter, not the beginning of the entire game.

The music? It's one of my favorite soundtracks, but it's nothing like the movie. If you've played other SunSoft games on the NES, you should know what to expect.

Inclusion of stages where you drive the batmobile and/or batwing would have secured a fifth star, but no game is perfect.

If you consider yourself a fan of old-school 2D action with some platform jumping thrown in, you owe it to yourself to give this a try. Otherwise you might want to consider a different hobby from video games.
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