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All snes versions
All snes versions





all snes versions

However, since the game has no save feature of any kind, all progress is lost once the power is turned off. The player can also attain a high score and have their results listed on the ranking board. The cutscenes differ between the Normal and Puzzle modes. The player will get a congratulatory message if they beat Hard on the High speed setting.Įvery five levels (ten in Puzzle mode), a cutscene is shown to the player of something comical happening to the AI characters from the Vs. Whoever accumulates three victories (or three fish in their tank in this game) wins. Creating two or more explosions will result in the opponent getting a forced block that they cannot slow down. However, unlike Normal and Puzzle mode where clearing the bottommost Flash Bomb blows up the other bombs of the same color, this does not work in Versus mode.

all snes versions

The goal of Versus mode is to clear all of the Flash Bombs first before your opponent does so. There are three AI characters Easy, Normal, and Hard. In Versus mode, the player can choose against either a human or AI-controlled opponent.

all snes versions

Unlike the Normal mode, the Puzzle mode has a 3-character password system so the player can resume where they left off. There are one-hundred stages in all, and the goal is not only to clear the Flash Bombs off the screen, but clear the board entirely of bombs and pieces. In Puzzle mode, a set problem is shown, and the player uses a set number of pieces to solve the puzzle. After round 30, after every ten levels, the background scenery will change, giving the player something new to look at in an attempt to break up the monotony. The player must beat all eighty stages to beat the game. In Normal, the player selects their speed (Low, Medium, and High) as well as their starting level (up to round 30). There is also a Versus mode, where the player can compete against either another player or against one of the three AI opponents, Easy, Normal, and Hard. Like the 8-bit versions, there are the Normal and Puzzle modes.

all snes versions

Once all of the Flash Bombs are destroyed, you can proceed to the next level. In Tetris 2, the goal of the game is to eliminate all of the Flash Bombs by matching two or more of the same color of the Flash Bomb with Tetris pieces. Where the NES and Game Boy versions had a Native American/Latin American atmosphere to the graphics, the SNES version uses toony graphics. Despite being developed by the same company, the game is not a direct port of the NES or Game Boy versions, at least for the graphics. It was developed by ghost developer TOSE and published by Nintendo. Tetris 2 (known as Tetris Flash in Japan) is the sequel to the popular puzzle game Tetris. For other games in the series, see Tetris.







All snes versions