Blood Brothers 2
Electroplankton ds game. Electroplankton is represented in Super Smash Bros. Brawl with its own stage called Hanenbow that is based on the Hanenbow feature. This stage also returned in Super Smash Bros. Several stickers and Spirits based on the game were in these two games. See also edit. Electroplankton is an interesting experiment in both music and game design, but its reliance on the novelty of something different limits its lasting value. Super Mario Kart boosts onto Wii Shop. ElectroPlankton was created by Japanese contemporary musician Toshio Iwai, and is being referred to as a 'Touchable Media Art' game. The 'game' places players in a water-based world. As the title states, Elektroplankton is a collection of different musical instruments. I would love to be able to save things, and a non-homebrew sequencer/synth app would be amazing (though the DS isn't powerful enough for much there). However, I also love that I can approach Electroplankton like my guitar or keyboards.
Blood Brothers 2 is a sequel to the anthology Blood Brothers published by Chaosium in 1990. Like the first book, Blood Brothers 2 is an anthology of nine short adventures that are based on themes, monsters and plots taken from classic B movies.
Blood Brothers 2 is an anthology of short adventures published by Chaosium in 1992 for the Lovecraftian horror role-playing game Call of Cthulhu.
Contents[edit]
Blood Brothers 2 is a sequel to the anthology Blood Brothers published by Chaosium in 1990. Like the first book, Blood Brothers 2 is an anthology of nine short adventures that are based on themes, monsters and plots taken from classic B movies.[1] The adventures include references to Gidget, High Plains Drifter, and Mexican lucha libre wrestlers.[2]
Reception[edit]
In the November 1992 edition of Dragon (Issue 187), Allen Varney enjoyed the generous serving of B-movie humor, saying, 'Cue the theremin!'[2]
Reviews[edit]
- White Wolf #35 (March/April, 1993)
References[edit]
- ^'Blood Brothers 2 - RPGnet RPG Game Index'. index.rpg.net.
- ^ abVarney, Allen (November 1992). 'Roleplaying Reviews'. Dragon. TSR, Inc. (187): 91.