Disney's Magical Quest - Disney's Magical Quest 2 Starring Mickey & Minnie

Disney's Magical Quest 2 Starring Mickey & Minnie

Disney's Magical Quest 2
The Great Circus Mystery Starring Mickey and Minnie
Developer(s) Capcom
Publisher(s) Capcom/Nintendo (GBA Version)
Producer(s) Tokuro Fujiwara
Composer(s) Mari Yamaguchi
Platform(s) SNES, Sega Genesis, Game Boy Advance
Release date(s) SNES version
  • November 11, 1994
  • December 16, 1994
  • February, 1995
Mega Drive/Genesis version
  • December 6, 1994
  • December 15, 1994
Game Boy Advance version
  • August 6, 2003
  • November 11, 2003
  • November 27, 2003
Genre(s) Platformer
Mode(s) 1 or 2 Players

Originally titled The Great Circus Mystery Starring Mickey and Minnie, this game was released for the Super Nintendo Entertainment System, Sega Genesis and Game Boy Advance. It features both Mickey and Minnie Mouse, investigate a bad circus and defeat Baron Pete.

The game ditches the alternating two-player method in favor of simultaneous co-op. Another new feature is a password back-up.

Both Mickey and Minnie are identical gameplay-wise, and the costumes they receive don't differ from each other in any aspect except in the colours.

The costumes include a sweeper, which can suck enemies and turn them into coins, a safari suit that can climb walls and swing from hooks and a cowboy suit that shoots corks and maneuvers by bouncing. The latter two outfits can be upgraded at a shop.

The Genesis version of the game includes a cosmetic change for the stage 5 boss and a replaced room in stage 3.

In the GBA version, Mickey's eyebrows are removed during closeups of Mickey and the character select screen is different because Mickey had a slightly short face change appearance in the 21st century Mickey Mouse Cartoons. A save feature was added in the GBA Version as well.

On release, Famicom Tsūshin scored the Super Famicom version of the game a 26 out of 40.

Read more about this topic:  Disney's Magical Quest

Famous quotes containing the words magical, quest, starring and/or mickey:

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    Mary Kay Blakely (20th century)

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    ... memory is the only way home.
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