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The game contains nine stages and three difficulty levels; only by choosing the hardest level can the player access all nine stages and see the true ending. According to a North American television commercial by the game's publisher, Acclaim, the NES version of Double Dragon II became a million seller soon after its release. [2]
The Family Computer/Nintendo Entertainment System has a library of 1376 [a] officially licensed games released during their lifespans, plus 7 official multicarts and 2 championship cartridges. Of these, 672 were released exclusively in Japan, 187 were released exclusively in North America, and 19 were released exclusively in PAL countries.
Other publishers include Capcom with seven games, Konami with six games, Bandai and Hudson Soft with five games each, and Enix and Namco with four games each. The most popular franchises on NES include Super Mario with 67.63 million combined units, Dragon Quest with 11.475 million combined units, and The Legend of Zelda with 10.89 million ...
The Mega Drive version of Double Dragon II: The Revenge was released by Palsoft exclusively in Japan on December 20, 1991. [9] Unlike the NES version, the Mega Drive version is a straight port of the original arcade game, featuring the same stages, techniques and weapons, as well as almost every enemy character, with Jeff being the lone omission.
In 2009, IGN ranked it the 15th best NES game in their Top 100 NES Games list. [33] In 2012, GamesRadar ranked it the seventh best NES game ever made. The staff felt that it was more memorable than Ghosts 'n Goblins, Legend of Kage, and Double Dragon, and is still influential. [30] In 2014, GamesRadar ranked it the eleventh best NES game of all ...
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Double Dragon (video game) Double Dragon 3: The Rosetta Stone; Double Dragon Advance; Double Dragon Gaiden: Rise of the Dragons; Double Dragon II (Game Boy) Double Dragon II: The Revenge; Double Dragon II: The Revenge (NES video game) Double Dragon III: The Sacred Stones; Double Dragon IV; Double Dragon Neon; Double Dragon V: The Shadow Falls
Technōs Japan Corp. [1] was a Japanese video game developer, best known for the Double Dragon and Kunio-kun franchises (the latter including Renegade, Super Dodge Ball and River City Ransom) as well as Karate Champ, The Combatribes and Voltage Fighter Gowcaizer.