In this ffile, I run through the story mode for Painwheel, a character in Skullgirls, a highly underrated fighting game from 2012.
Note: I am not using any accessibility mods to make the game speak menus. Skullgirls Second Encore, a mainstream video game, is natively accessible without mods. The screen reader used is NVDA.
I promise, this is the last Street Fighter gameplay recording I'll do for a while.
Street Fighter EX 3, the last installment in the Street Fighter EX franchise developed by Arika and published by Capcom, was first released in Japan on March 4th, 2000 as a launch title for the Sony Playstation 2. Street Fighter EX 3 adopts a tag battle system, allowing a fighter to tag anyone in their team at any time during a fight. Also, EX 3 introduces a mechanic called the surprise blow, which lets fighters perform special attacks without using their super bar.
Unlike EX and EX 2, and other games in the main Street Fighter series for that matter, EX 3 does not employ the traditional concept of winning fights based on number of rounds or a fighter's health compared to their opponent. Instead, EX 3's gameplay is divided into 6 stages, with each stage being completed when all fighter's in the opponent's team are defeated. Exceptions to this rule are stages 3 and 5, which are one-on-one battles.
For blind players, all games in the Street Fighter EX series will announce the selected fighter when chosen.
Note: This gameplay was done with the PCSX2 emulator, which runs like garbage on my system, so you will hear some slowdowns.
Last time, we played Street Fighter II Turbo as Ryu. Now, we're playing as Ryu's sparring partner, best friend and moveset twin Ken. You can't spell shoryuken without Ryu and Ken, right?
Ryu might be a truly awesome SF2 character, but he's a royal pain in the backside to beat!
Oddly, this port of Super Street Fighter II announces country stages, but it does not announce rounds. Therefore, you have to time the start of a fight just right if you want to get the first move in.
Let me know which game(s) you'd like me to demo next.
Here's some gameplay of Street Fighter II Turbo (1993) for the Super Nintendo. As you can tell, I did a lot better in fights than I did in bonus stages. Though, some fights I did struggle a bit with.
Unfortunately, we didn't managed to complete this game, and the XP VM glitched out on me a couple times during this recording.
Here is a recording of Classic Pipe, a remaster of BSC's original game of Pipe (2002) with some new sounds, new voicing, and a new wacky character named Plumber Joe.
Classic Pipe's version number is 1.0.1, while the original's is 1.0. I wonder why they didn't go with version 1.1 or even 1.5 for Classic Pipe, since it's almost a rewrite of Pipe 1.0, and Pipe 2 Blast Chamber came out in the same year as Classic Pipe.
Classic Pipe can be downloaded from https://www.agarchive.net/pages/devs/bsc.html.
In this file, we play a few rounds of Crazy Darts by BSC Games, one of the very first audio games I played on my school laptop back in 2007. This game was played on a virtual machine running Windows XP Service Pack 3.
Crazy Darts can be downloaded from https://www.agarchive.net/pages/devs/bsc.html
Here is some gameplay of Ten Pin Bowling, one of the MS-DOS audio games produced by PCS Games and released in 1997.
This was done using the MS-DOS prompt of a Windows 98 SE virtual machine, as I couldn't get sound to work when booted in full-blown MS-DOS mode. The ASAP screen reader for DOS was used in this file.
I found this on YouTube a few years ago. The Street Fighter 2 OST is my all time video game OST, and metal is one of my favourite music styles.
The original YouTube video can be found here: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=z9zeqpcoILg
Here's some EA Sports Knockout Kings 2002 gameplay on the Playstation 2. I'm playing as Kazahiro Arikawa, and fighting Zab Judah.
See the Sightless Fighter's Guide to Knockout Kings 2002: https://seediffusion.cc/SFG/SFG_KOK02.html
This is the official Seediffusion logo, without the 'this is Seediffusion' part because I can't find a voice.
Visit the Seediffusion website: https://seediffusion.cc