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Blast Corps

There’s a nuclear missile toting truck on route to a detonation site somewhere in the world, and you’re tasked to make sure it doesn’t hit anything.  There’s a catch - the missile truck can’t turn.


So is the “story” in Rare’s Blast Corps for the Nintendo 64.  In Blast Corps, you take the role of a bulldozer, dump trucks, giant robots, and other wrecking equipment just to ensure the protection and safety of the population of the world.  Destroying buildings over and over may be repetitive, but it sure is a lot of fun.  This first generation N64 title doesn’t go easy on the technical side, either, featuring building crumble effects for remarkable graphics for its day, and a remarkable physics engine.

 

The Blast Corps Soundtrack features many fun and cute sounds in the middle of it, and contains a rather “redneck” style of music.

 

 

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Halo Track

The reason to own an Xbox, Halo: Combat Evolved (or Halo 1, as it’s now known after the release of its fantastic sequel) was and still remains one of the best looking games ever released. 

 

The single player campaign features remarkable cinematic displays and fantastic physics, making the game seem all the more real while you’re having fun.  Much of this fun comes from driving the “Warthog,” the games jeep.  Halo also features split-screen and LAN multiplayer, making it a party favorite.

 
Conkers Bad Fur Day

Receiving a score from IGN of 9.9 out of 10, Conker’s Bad Fur Day was one of the highest rated games on record.  Unfortunately for Rare, Nintendo went to almost too much trouble to make sure that the game was marketed strictly to a mature audience, and the sales were poor at best.

 

Playing as a squirrel the day after his 21st Birthday, Conker is a raunchy humorous game that parody’s every major movie you can think of from “Saving Private Ryan” to “The Matrix.”

 

The Conker’s Bad Fur Day Soundtrack is based loosely off of the movies that the game is parodying, from a majestic fanfare of brass in the “It’s War” chapter to the heavy bass and techno of the “Rock Solid Theme.”

 
007 Golden Eye

Widely regarded as the first console first-person shooter (read “first” as incredibly good), Rare’s Goldeneye 007 for the Nintendo 64 remained one of the top 10 selling games each year that the Nintendo 64 was on the market, despite the fact that it came out in 1997.

 

Going on to sell over 9,000,000 copies worldwide, the game stood out as a fan favorite do to its remarkable graphics, easy to pick up and play control scheme, and for the first time ever on a home game console, intense (and nearly flawless) multiplayer action.

 

The Goldeneye Soundtrack is largely based off of the James Bond movie by the same name, but the score includes many fantastic pieces spanning from soft/sneaky music as heard in the Syberia-based “Surface” levels to the action packed “Cradle” level.  This soundtrack was provided by staff member Yolme, and includes special bonus tracks that were exclusive to multiplayer.

 

 

 

 


 

Diablo 2

Diablo II took a simple idea (that being to kill bad guys) and stretched it for hours upon end.  And it worked.  Diablo II is still one of the more popular online PC games today (5 years after its release), partially because of Blizzard Entertainment’s Battle.net online game system, but more because it’s really that good.

 

The game has you pick a hero (a Paladin, an Amazon, a Barbarian, a Sorceress, or a Necromancer) out to save the world from three evil brothers, the Lord of Hatred (Mephisto), the Lord of Destruction (Baal), and the Lord of Terror, whom the game is named after (Diablo). 

 

The Diablo II Soundtrack is fully orchestrated, and features great instrumental work, as do many of the Blizzard Entertainment games.  Guitars, wind instruments, and vocals are very common in this score