🟢 VOL 2 is LIVE now! > 🔥 VOL 1 sold out!
Revive all the good memories with those epic games!
>> NFT ZenDrop
🔕 No notifications, no noise
🐦 No social media missions
💬 No discord channel
❤️ No financial appeal (emotional appeal)
💰 Honest prices
🤝 Transparency
⛽️ No gas fees (Solana)
🛣 Experiences for NFT holders
💎 For real collectors and fans
📢 Follow us for more news + roadmap
NFT collector routine is crazy (right?) - being aware of all projects, drops, do own research, keep track of dozens of Discord channels and notifications, deal with bots and scams, you know the drill... We want to avoid that, we don't want to be one more reason for your FOMO or your NFT anxiety.
706Görünümler
0Beğeniler
Open Artwork
Developer
Sega
Publisher
Sega
Year
1989
Golden Axe[a] is a side-scrolling hack-and-slash video game released by Sega for arcades in 1989, running on the Sega System 16-B arcade hardware. Makoto Uchida was the lead designer of the game, and was also responsible for the creation of the previous year's Altered Beast. The game casts players as one of three warriors who must free the fantastical land of Yuria from the tyrannical rule of Death Adder, who wields the titular Golden Axe.
Progress is made through the game by fighting through Death Adder's henchmen, including men armed with clubs and maces, skeleton warriors, and knights. Players are able to attack using their weapon, jump and cast spells that hurt all enemies on the screen. The force of this magic depends on the number of "bars" of magic power currently available. The bars are filled by collecting blue "magic potions" attained by kicking little sprites who then drop the potions. These sprites appear during regular levels and during bonus stages in between levels. The male warrior Ax is able to cast earth spells. The dwarf Gilius casts lightning spells and the female warrior Tyris casts fire magic. Each character has a different maximum number of magic bars and varying ranges of attack.
In Japan, Game Machine listed Golden Axe on their 1 July 1989 issue as being the second most successful table arcade cabinet of the month. It went on to be the 18th highest-grossing arcade game of 1989 in Japan. In the United States, it was the highest-grossing arcade game of January 1990.