

- Master of monsters game Patch#
- Master of monsters game Pc#
- Master of monsters game series#
- Master of monsters game download#
- Master of monsters game windows#
The PSP game has a PS2 equivalent for which a translation patch is available.
Master of monsters game windows#
On PC-98 and Windows you have tools to hook text and use machine translation. Master of Monsters originated on computers, most installments have been made available for Windows I believe.
Master of monsters game series#
I don't know Japanese, but I'd be willing to try and acquire the games in the Master of Monsters series (because I'm more into fantasy than historical simulation) and send them off to someone who knows Japanese and/or has Japanese computers to play them on, and play editor on an article. It's starting to sound like these two series need HG101 articles.
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Getting back to Master of Monsters, I was just ebay searching and saw someone selling a PC9801 game called Master of Monsters II, and apparently this is a case (like Hydlide and Eggerland Mystery) where some installments only exist on Japanese PCs.

though I seem to remember it was actually optional and you could play the Allies if you wanted, but the title makes it clear you're supposed to be the Nazis). I can think of precisely one game where you do, and as it happens, its a game that I just saw a wiki somewhere claim was "inspired" by Daisenryaku-Panzer General (which spawned a series and, somehow, actually saw release in Germany despite, you know, you play as the Nazis. The only placed its mentined here on HG101 (besides the forums) is in an article on the Sega Ages re-releases, where the author said that a game where you play as the nazis would never fly in the west. Sometimes there’s a good explanation as to why.Heh, ran into an irony while looking up Daisenryaku. Do!: Rare games are rare for a reason – nobody bought them. So basically my favorite thing about Master of Monsters is that I saved about $17 on it. And that ended up being the copy that went into my personal collection, so its not like I even got to enjoy a 900% markup on it or anything. Stryker:This game’s decent, but I’d be lying if I said that my fondest memory of it wasn’t when some guy came into my store and traded it in for a few bucks. Why don’t you ever fight your own battles for once?
Master of monsters game Pc#
I know it may not seem fair to compare a PC game to a Genesis title, but believe me when I tell you that the things that make Warlords so much better have almost everything to do with design and little to do with platform.
Master of monsters game download#
Or you could download the game I mentioned a two paragraphs ago, Warlords, which is in the same genre but vastly superior, off of an abandonware site and play it on the very PC you’re using to read this. You could try to track down a copy of the fairly rare Master of Monsters, checking out eBay, going to used game stores and flea markets, and probably spend about $20 to buy a copy, which may or may not still have a functional battery for saving your game. And MoM withholds the info that we need to be able to do both. But understanding the game conceptually, and actually being able to figure out what’s going on are two different things. A lot of the resource management aspects are simplified, but in a good way that streamlines the game and allows you to focus on tactics. We gave Master of Monsters the nod over a lot of other hex-based strategy games in the Genesis library largely because it was one of a few that we could understand without taking a college-level course in it first. I don’t mind this complete lack of necessary info – it’s not like I’m trying to plan a war or anything. I’ll just assume it’s a mountain, move my red blob there, and hope that my red blob gets a bonus from fighting on what might be a mountain. Of course, since the game never makes the information about terrain effects readily available, I guess it’s a moot point, anyway. Our yellow Pegasus takes on one of the blue blobs… whichever one is the dragon. Are those red lines supposed to be a mountain, or a lava pool, or just a really big pizza that someone left laying around? I need to know, because different landscapes can have a variety of effects on my units.

But at least I can tell what they are eventually – the same can’t be said of terrain. This slows things down, as now I have to select every one of them to figure out what they are, and what they’re attacking. In Master of Monsters, all my units just sort of look like red blobs. When I play Warlords, I can tell my infantry apart from my cavalry because my infantry looks like a little guy, and my cavalry looks like a little guy on a horse. Brad:I think its safe to say that nobody plays strategy games for the graphics, but there is a minimum requirement of functionality.
