![]() A port of After Burner to the Game Boy Advance was included in an arcade 4 pack named Sega Arcade Gallery.Ĭomputer Gaming World reviewed After Burner on the Master System, citing aircraft depicted in "remarkable detail", "spectacular" scenery, and excellent explosions. An unlicensed NES port of the game developed by Tengen also exists, which was reworked by Sunsoft for their Japanese-exclusive port to the same console. A port of After Burner to the 32X was done by Rutubo Games, and was known as After Burner Complete in Japan and Europe. The C64 has two versions: a European version by U.S. The game was ported to the Amiga, DOS based PCs, Amstrad CPC, Atari ST, Sharp X68000, FM Towns, Commodore 64, Master System, PC Engine, Sega Saturn, PC, MSX, ZX Spectrum. Japan also got a commander cabinet that moves left and right. Both cabinets contained a grey monitor frame with flashing lights at the top that indicated an enemy's "lock" on the player's craft. It featured two speakers at head-level for stereo sound, and had a seatbelt to hold the player when the cockpit rotated. In the cockpit version, the seat rotated horizontally, and the cockpit rotated vertically. The game itself was released in two variations in the us: a standard upright cabinet and a rotating cockpit version. The aircraft, cannon and missile buttons are all controlled from an integrated flight stick. These weapons are replenished by another aircraft, after beating a few stages. ![]() In the arcade version, the jet employs a machine gun and a limited number of heat-seeking missiles (in the Master System version the player has unlimited missiles). At the start of the game, the player takes off from an aircraft carrier called the SEGA Enterprise, which shares a similar name to the one used in the 1986 film Top Gun (also a reference to the company's name at the time, SEGA Enterprises, LTD.). The player's mission is to destroy enemy jets over 18 stages. The game allows the player to control a F-14 Tomcat jet airplane.
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