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View Full Version : New Noah's Ark for NES, Super Noah for Sega Genesis, and Collection for GBA



Nz17
07-13-2017, 12:01 PM
Noah's Ark for NES and Sega Genesis.

Wisdom Tree New Game Cartridges! Noah's Ark for NES, Super Noah's Ark for Genesis and Wisdom Tree Collection for GBA!

https://www.kickstarter.com/projects/1549719931/noahs-ark-for-nes-and-sega-genesis

Wisdom Tree is making new cartridges and ports of its old games.

Greg2600
07-13-2017, 01:19 PM
Garbage games that don't deserve to be re-released let alone given a crowd funding.

WulfeLuer
07-13-2017, 07:11 PM
The only religious pirate I can put up with is Patch. :shameful:

OldSchoolGamer
07-14-2017, 09:13 PM
Waste of time, money and effort.

Bojay1997
07-19-2017, 07:21 PM
Garbage games that don't deserve to be re-released let alone given a crowd funding.

Gotta say I strongly agree with this.

celerystalker
07-19-2017, 07:59 PM
Not that I'll be backing, but the NES game here is the PAL Konami game, not the Wisdom Tree Bible Adventures (for which I have a soft spot, but I wouldn't try to convince anyone it's legitimately good).

Daniel Thomas
09-18-2017, 08:35 PM
I gotta be honest, I really enjoyed Super 3D Noah's Ark on the Super Nintendo. Yes, yes, yes, it's the Ned Flanders version of Wolfenstein 3D. The gameplay was fluid and responsive, enemies were always popping out of everywhere, each level was packed with hidden alleyways and bonus rooms, and the boss fights were always a challenge. Did I care that you only knocked them out instead of killing them? Of course not.

I'm sorry to see that this Kickstarter project failed to reach their goals. I wonder if the Genesis translation was finished? I would definitely pay for a Sega Dreamcast version. Heck, I think they ought to do that anyway. If they need to make money, they should just publish on iOS and make a killing.

Most of the Wisdom Tree games were average at best, especially the 2D platformers, but Exodus and Joshua were very, very solid -- basically ripoffs of the classic Boulderdash, but solid. Crystal Mines on NES was the original version, and that game saw a terrific sequel on Atari Lynx, which automatically makes it cool. Oh, and they released the King James on the Gameboy, which I thought was pretty impressive at the time. But I always had my nose in a book, so I would have been happy to have "Gameboy books."

Really, if you're a diehard NES fan, check out the Color Dreams library. It's a previous version of the same company, an interesting collection of platforms and shoot-em-ups. Again, the quality was rarely better than average, but you could tell that the programmers tried their best. I'll give extra points for heart, especially in out modern age of corporate laziness. Don't get me started on EA Sports.