


X-Men for the Sega Genesis is one of those games you would see commercials for on TV back in the ’90’-s and immediately be envious of those who owned a Sega Genesis.

Spider-Man 3: Invasion of the Spider-Slayers, which concluded one of the few Marvel video game trilogies not tied to a film, would end up better than the difficult to control and navigate Spider-Man 2, but would still fall short of Rare’s first outing, due in large part to clumsy controls and unfair platforming as early as the third stage. Unfortunately Rare would not work on the sequels, with them being handed off to Bits Studio who crafted Spider-Man’s debut for the NES: Spider-Man: Return of the Sinister Six. None of the games by Bits would meet the standard set by Rare’s first outing with the immediate problem being that every game developed by Bits flipped jump and attack from what players were used to. Rare’s The Amazing Spider-Man for the Game Boy was one of the better earlier Spider-Man games with great opening and between level character art, terrific music, and a decent representation of the title character and his gallery of rogues. Each series will be graded on whether they ended on a “High” or “Low” point unless there’s some extenuating circumstances.ĮNDGAME: SPIDER-MAN 3: INVASION OF THE SPIDER-SLAYERS What this means is that Fantastic Four and Fantastic Four: Rise of the Silver Surfer don’t count as they’re from different publishers – Activision and 2K respectively – and Marvel Ultimate Alliance won’t be included as it has a full numbered sequel coming. Some have left players who have been along for the journey on a satisfying note, while others left them wishing they would just get one more chapter to bow out on a high note.įor the purposes of this feature, a series will be any that has either a number, is from the same publisher and has no rumored new entry in the pipeline. This week the world turns its collective attention to Marvel Avengers: Endgame, a film that will conclude over a decade of films in the shared Marvel Cinematic Universe and reveal the fate of those affected by The Snap at the conclusion of Marvel Avengers: Infinity War. Throughout the years there have been many Marvel video games that share a connecting thread, either by having numbers in their title or by being spiritual successors with shared design ideas.
