Ports and Related Releases
- The arcade game was later ported to the Nintendo Famicom (this version adds a "pious" counter), and PC Engine consoles with several additions and different level design. The PC Engine version and the arcade version were both later re-released for the Japanese Virtual Console.
- The game was later followed by a Japan-only spin-off titled Kyūkai Dōchūki, a "yakyuu" (baseball) video game.
- Tarosuke also appears as a playable character in the Japan-only RPG titled Namco × Capcom. In the game he teams up with Taira no Kagekiyo from Genpei Tōma Den.
Read more about this topic: Shadow Land (video Game)
Famous quotes containing the words ports and, ports, related and/or releases:
“I need not tell you of the inadequacy of the American shipping marine on the Pacific Coast.... For this reason it seems to me that there is no subject to which Congress can better devote its attention in the coming session than the passage of a bill which shall encourage our merchant marine in such a way as to establish American lines directly between New York and the eastern ports and South American ports, and both our Pacific Coast ports and the Orient and the Philippines.”
—William Howard Taft (18571930)
“I need not tell you of the inadequacy of the American shipping marine on the Pacific Coast.... For this reason it seems to me that there is no subject to which Congress can better devote its attention in the coming session than the passage of a bill which shall encourage our merchant marine in such a way as to establish American lines directly between New York and the eastern ports and South American ports, and both our Pacific Coast ports and the Orient and the Philippines.”
—William Howard Taft (18571930)
“In the middle years of childhood, it is more important to keep alive and glowing the interest in finding out and to support this interest with skills and techniques related to the process of finding out than to specify any particular piece of subject matter as inviolate.”
—Dorothy H. Cohen (20th century)
“We need a type of theatre which not only releases the feelings, insights and impulses possible within the particular historical field of human relations in which the action takes place, but employs and encourages those thoughts and feelings which help transform the field itself.”
—Bertolt Brecht (18981956)