web tracker
NEOGEO POCKET COLOR SELECTION Vol.2 Switch NSP Free Download Unfitgirl

NEOGEO POCKET COLOR SELECTION Vol.2 Switch NSP Free Download

NEOGEO POCKET COLOR SELECTION Vol.2 Switch NSP Free Download Unfitgirl


NEOGEO POCKET COLOR SELECTION Vol.2 Switch NSP Free Download Unfitgirl One of the only real criticisms we levelled at the recent Mega Man Battle & Fighters, a re-release of a Neo Geo Pocket Color title included in this new package, was that nobody had bothered to translate the content from Japanese. It was an issue exacerbated by a fan translation already existing online for those willing to go the emulation route. Neo Geo Pocket Color Selection Vol.2, on the same basis, is equally disappointing. There are ten titles on board this follow-up to Vol.1 — four of which are already available to buy separately on Switch eShop — nicely presented as little cartridges on the menu, each with a variety of options. The language barrier issue affects three titles, one of which is the aforementioned Mega Man Battle & Fighters. The other two are board game King of Fighters: Battle de Paradise, and minigame/sim curio Ganbare Neo Poke-Kun, both of which are fairly well-known to Neo Pocket aficionados as two of the system’s more intriguing titles. In Battle de Paradise you can bring up the manual freely to decipher the text, although it resets to the first page each time you do. If you can figure out the structure of things (which involves choosing a character, a sidekick striker, and rolling a die) you can get started on the board’s squares until you enter a minigame. These consist of memory tests, target shooting and the like, occasionally based on classic SNK properties. But it’s still a fairly text-heavy affair. Some of the minigames are quizzes, of sorts, where the only instruction in the manual is “depending on your response. Unfitgirl.COM SEXY GAMES

NEOGEO POCKET COLOR SELECTION Vol.2 Switch NSP Free Download Unfitgirl
NEOGEO POCKET COLOR SELECTION Vol.2 Switch NSP Free Download Unfitgirl

your EX Striker’s alignment, etc. may be affected”. Not exactly ideal. The goal is to be victorious at the minigames and accrue more stars than your opponent before the number of turns ends, but it will require patience and regular manual referrals for a non-Japanese speaker to sync with it. Ganbare Neo Poke-Kun’s language barrier is thankfully less of an issue, although one’s mileage will vary regarding its novelty appeal. A cross between a virtual pet and WarioWare, Neo Poke-Kun is a weird ant-like creature who lives inside the Neo Geo Pocket Color’s internal hardware, in a room littered with posters, consoles, toys, and other oddities. Not dissimilar to the Mega-CD’s Panic!, Poke-Kun lolls around the room while you press buttons, swing the analog dial, make various things go off and on, and sometimes demolish his house in the process. Eventually, you can call on visitors who burst in one door, run across the screen, and exit into the bathroom on the other side. The animated sketches are amusing, and occasionally suggestive, and the graphical style is great. The aim is to make Poke-Kun happy and keep him active enough to head off and get to work on the minigames he’s meant to be building. You can check the progress of these games — of which there are 30 — and access them when the percentage meter fills. The minigames are fine, basic reaction tests with an arcade slant, and mostly fun in short bursts, which is exactly how they’re meant to be taken. But, with no ‘happiness’ indicator to let you know how you’re doing, the twiddling-buttons-for-effect portion can become tedious while you wait for something to actually play.

NEOGEO POCKET COLOR SELECTION Vol.2 Play through a varied lineup of genres from sports, puzzles, table games, and more!.

Mega Man Battle & Fighters, as we mentioned in our full review, is good, solid fighting fun, remodeling two of Capcom’s arcade games for SNK’s handheld wonder. Again, translations, even if just for the menus, would have been nice, but they’re overcome with relatively little perseverance. Big Bang Pro Wrestling (also available separately on eShop) plays similarly to most 16-bit wrestling titles of the era, but is actually rendered really well, featuring an interesting and extensive character line-up. It’s certainly good enough to appeal to fans who enjoy the genre. It scores points for squeezing surprising mechanical depth into the hardware’s diminutive format. Baseball Stars works in a similar fashion to its arcade-based cousins, offering nine teams with varying abilities in pitching, batting, fielding, and running. The actual running bit is automated, so it all comes down to training your swing timing and positioning. It’s a tad crude, not hugely involving, but if you appreciate the sport you might sink a little time into it. Biomotor Unitron is a neat dungeon crawler RPG with an emphasis on developing parts, building your Unitron, and seeing it improve when entering dungeons to do battle. It’s an interesting adventure if you’re willing to dedicate time to it, and its visual novel-styled over-world is graphically very fetching. It’s more likely to appeal to fans of the genre, but it’s undoubtedly well-formed. (Read our full review for more details.) Puzzle Link 2 is — you guessed it — a puzzle game, presented beautifully with a cast of great-looking characters. And, discounting the original Puzzle Link.Rise of Nations: Extended Edition

NEOGEO POCKET COLOR SELECTION Vol.2 Switch NSP Free Download Unfitgirl
NEOGEO POCKET COLOR SELECTION Vol.2 Switch NSP Free Download Unfitgirl

it’s an excitingly original concept. As rows descend from above, acting as a timer, the player must create coloured links between corresponding icons, drawing lines across the screen to detonate clumps. It can be tricky at first to figure out all the available tactics, but once you get into it it makes for an engaging time-sink. There’s also a two-player battle mode available for local play. Neo Geo Cup ’98 Plus and Neo Geo Pocket Tennis are sports titles, unsurprisingly, and they’re fine. Cup ’98 is your basic overhead football game, where every sprite is the same dude, and you’re limited to two buttons to do all your running, tackling, passing, and shooting. It works well enough for a few goes, but it might not hold your attention for long, especially when Germany keeps fouling you all the time. Pocket Tennis is a little better, although collision detection on the ball takes some getting used to. Still, with five courts, several tweakable modes, and a bunch of characters, it’s decent, if short-lived, fun. Card Fighters Clash is probably one of the better-known titles in the collection, a card-battling game made more alluring by the involvement of SNK and Capcom’s famous fighting characters. You’re dealt five cards automatically from a deck of 50, and then go about using limited ‘SP’ and other attributes to defeat your opponent’s deck. It’s a game that will require some manual reference, and not because of a language barrier. Rather, it’s quite deep strategically, with a variety of different attacks, including ‘union’ actions, counters, and abilities unique to each character card.

This collection contains ten titles in total, including four that are currently sold separately—meaning six new titles have been added!

When you have a handle on it, it’s both fun and rewarding to strategise your deck and come out victorious, offering a little brain-teasing management to what initially seems like a mundane concept. (Check out our full SNK VS. Capcom: Card Fighters’ Clash review for more details.) Vol.2 offers a varied and solid selection of software, then. It auto-saves your game progress and offers two-player local action for several titles. Compared to the previous volume, featuring fighting games galore and both Metal Slug titles, the selection here is definitely a notch down. Interests in each title will vary player-to-player, and with such a broad variety of genres, one needs to consider whether you will really get your money’s worth, despite the steady level of quality. At the same time — and here comes the rub — we’re peeved that the opportunity to translate titles like King of Fighters: Battle de Paradise is still being overlooked. Nobody is buying that it’s a task too great in 2022, when fan translators have gone to work on great swathes of back-catalogue games for emulation purposes. SNK and Code Mystics have steadily been preserving the Neo Geo Pocket library for various platforms, and honestly, it’s been a good thing. The first wave of releases was brought together as one bundle in Neo Geo Pocket Color Selection Vol. 1, which honestly is a fantastic collection featuring some of the best portable fighting games ever made, and even a couple of solid Metal Slug releases too. Another wave of releases followed since, and these are now bundled together in an all-new volume in Neo Geo Pocket Color Selection Vol. 2.Land of War – The Beginning

NEOGEO POCKET COLOR SELECTION Vol.2 Switch NSP Free Download Unfitgirl
NEOGEO POCKET COLOR SELECTION Vol.2 Switch NSP Free Download Unfitgirl

Where the first compilation felt like an actual greatest hits curation, this follow-up feels like a collection of sloppy leftovers with a few noteworthy titles. The games are preserved nicely as virtual renditions of boxes, manuals, and even cartridges can be held up. The actual emulation is solid, and there are various filters and display settings to play around with. Of note is the ability to play most titles on different Neo Geo Pocket handhelds, as games can be played on emulated versions of the original monochrome Neo Geo Pocket, the standard Neo Geo Pocket Color, and even the relatively uncommon NEW Neo Geo Pocket Color. Unfortunately, the latter was a final hardware revision, which didn’t do much besides slightly enhanced audio. So it isn’t easy to notice the difference in the emulation, at least. Some of the games featured in Vol. 2 have already been released individually, most notable being SNK vs. Capcom: Card Fighters’ Clash, which remains a fun little tabletop experience comparable to Pokémon Trading Game on Game Boy Color. This is easily the strongest title in the collection, but it can be bought separately. Biomotor Unitron is included here, too; not the most compelling RPG by any stretch but still a fun portable experience. Surprisingly, the most enjoyable titles featured in this collection are the sports games, with Pocket Tennis being a highlight. It’s such a fun and simple game to get into, yet the play mechanics click so smoothly. Of course, there’s baseball too, which is just as fun and robust, and even soccer manages to be fun here. These are all great examples of how a sport can be interpreted as a bite-sized video game experience.

Features Re-wind functions so game overs are a thing of the past!

They’re easy to get into and yet have all the necessary quirks to keep it accurate to the real thing. Speaking of sports, there’s Big Bang Pro Wrestling which leans more toward being a fighting game. There aren’t that many pro wrestling games on portable consoles that have stood the test of time, so this one is a welcome inclusion, even though the grapple system isn’t the most interesting. The character sprites are detailed, and the game tries to nail the presentation right. Another odd fighting game in Vol. 2 is Mega Man: Battle & Fighters, which feels like a boss rush mode presented as a one-on-one fighting game. The game is largely based on Mega Man: The Power Battle, which can be found in Capcom Arcade Stadium 2. It’s interesting for what it is but hardly a game to come back to again and again. Some of the best portable experiences are puzzle games. While it would have been nice to see a little more included in Vol. 2, at least there is Puzzle Link, a simple mechanic of linking and chaining tiles works effectively to create a simple and compelling puzzle action game. It’s no Tetris or Puyo Puyo, but it does enough to help scratch an itch, even for a little while. What makes Vol. 2 particularly interesting is also the very same reason why this package feels like a missed opportunity. There’s a board game based on The King of Fighters and a weird experimental simulation called Ganbare Neo Poke-Kun. Unfortunately, both titles are entirely in Japanese here, with only their instruction manuals crudely translated.

There are online walkthroughs that can help, and it is nice to see games like Ganbare Neo preserved, but for most players, these will be largely inaccessible and unplayable experiences. Neo Geo Pocket Color Selection Vol. 2 is a collection of leftovers and interesting oddities at best. Baseball and tennis are a lot of fun, but not for the full price of admission. If you’re getting into the Neo Geo Pocket library for the first time, then you’re better off just enjoying Vol. 1 instead. The handheld didn’t have a vast library, to begin with, and so Vol. 2 feels like slim pickings. It feels safe to say that there probably weren’t many of us playing the Neo Geo Pocket Color at the turn of the millennium. While it did see a release on Western shores, many of its titles remained exclusive to Japan. More pertinently, it was competing against the handheld behemoth that was Nintendo’s Game Boy Advance. Therefore, the SNK Corporation’s Neo Geo Pocket Color Selection Vol. 2 represents a second opportunity to retroactively experience some of the best that the platform had to offer. As with the first volume, Neo Geo Pocket Color Selection Vol. 2 features ten titles to experience. On the face of it, that’s pretty decent value for money, but how many of these decades-old handheld titles hold up in 2022? Well, let’s have a look, shall we? A stripped-back and miniaturised version of one of its big brother’s better-known titles, this is the first of a number of sports titles in the collection. Unfortunately (spoiler for other parts of this review), as with all of the other sports titles in the collection, that simplicity doesn’t necessarily work in its favour. It controls fine enough, but it’s all a little slow and ponderous.

NEOGEO POCKET COLOR SELECTION Vol.2 Switch NSP Free Download Unfitgirl
NEOGEO POCKET COLOR SELECTION Vol.2 Switch NSP Free Download Unfitgirl

While it unsurprisingly features plenty of charm, it all just feels a little shallow. It’s been a long time since I played a two-button wrestling game, but a couple of them – WWF Wrestlefest in the arcades and Fire Pro Wrestling on the GBA – are still some of my favourite wrestling games of all-time. Big Bang Wrestling isn’t quite up to those standards, but it’s still one of the better titles on the collection. A varied roster, nicely animated sprites and a surprisingly deep combat system make this worth checking out. The biggest susprise of the collection for me, as I generally don’t like either strategy titles or JRPGs. Yet I found myself oddly compelled here. Blending traditional fantasy elements with mech building and combat, Biomotor Unitron does a competent job of combining the two. It also builds an engaging world through the use of visual novel-style cutscenes. Better than I expected, and I’d suggest a must-play for fans of the genre. More of a curio than an actual game, this is the first game in the collecion not to feature any English text. This meant referring regularly to the English manual and experimenting until I figured stuff out. However, it’s much less of an issue here than it is in some of the collection’s more complex titles (more on that shortly). Essentially a bizarre Big Brother-esque voyeur sim with added minigames, it’s little more than a 10-minute distraction. ‘Mario Party with King of Fighters characters’ is a hell of a pitch, I’m not going to lie. Sadly, this is pretty much where the intrigue ends for me, as this is the game most directly affected by the lack of English text. Yes, again, the manual is in English, which means you can at least figure out the controls. But it’s a text-heavy game and, in 2022, I don’t feel like I should have to work this hard to get enjoyment from a game. In Sound Mind Switch NSP

Add-ons (DLC): NEOGEO POCKET COLOR SELECTION Vol.2 Switch NSP

NSP Format
Requires a 64-bit processor and operating system
OS: Windows 7 (32/64bit)
Processor: Intel Core i5 @ 2.0 GHz
Memory: 2 GB RAM
Graphics: Nvidia GeForce GTX 560
DirectX: Version 9.0
Storage: 2 GB available space


Requires a 64-bit processor and operating system
OS: –
Processor: –
Memory: –
Graphics: –
DirectX:-
Storage: –
Sound Card: –
Additional Notes: –

NOTE: THESE STEPS MAY VARY FROM GAME TO GAME AND DO NOT APPLY TO ALL GAMES

  1. Open the Start menu (Windows ‘flag’ button) in the bottom left corner of the screen.
  2. At the bottom of the Start menu, type Folder Options into the Search box, then press the Enter key.
  3. Click on the View tab at the top of the Folder Options window and check the option to Show hidden files and folders (in Windows 11, this option is called Show hidden files, folders, and drives).
  4. Click Apply then OK.
  5. Return to the Start menu and select Computer, then double click Local Disk (C:), and then open the Program Files folder. On some systems, this folder is called ‘Program Files(x86)’.
  6. In the Program Files folder, find and open the folder for your game.
  7. In the game’s folder, locate the executable (.exe) file for the game–this is a faded icon with the game’s title.
  8. Right-click on this file, select Properties, and then click the Compatibility tab at the top of the Properties window.
  9. Check the Run this program as an administrator box in the Privilege Level section. Click Apply then OK.
  10. Once complete, try opening the game again

NOTE: PLEASE DOWNLOAD THE LATEST VERSION OF YUZU EMULATOR FROM SOME GAMES YOU MAY NEED  RYUJINX EMULATOR

  1. First you will need YUZU Emulator. Download it from either Unfitgirl, .. Open it in WinRar, 7ZIP idk and then move the contents in a folder and open the yuzu.exe.
  2. There click Emulation -> Configure -> System -> Profile Then press on Add and make a new profile, then close yuzu
    Inside of yuzu click File -> Open yuzu folder. This will open the yuzu configuration folder inside of explorer.
  3. Create a folder called “keys” and copy the key you got from here and paste it in the folder.
  4. For settings open yuzu up Emulation -> Configure -> Graphics, Select OpenGL and set it to Vulkan or OpenGL. (Vulkan seems to be a bit bad atm) Then go to Controls and press Single Player and set it to custom
  5. Then Press Configure and set Player 1 to Pro Controller if you have a controller/keyboard and to Joycons if Joycons. Press Configure and press the exact buttons on your controller After you’re done press Okay and continue to the next step.
  6. Download any ROM you want from Unfitgirl, .. After you got your File (can be .xci or .nsp) create a folder somewhere on your PC and in that folder create another folder for your game.
  7. After that double-click into yuzu and select the folder you put your game folder in.
  8. Lastly double click on the game and enjoy it.

(Visited 25 times, 1 visits today)

You May Also Like