Tmnt Turtles In Time Reshelled Pc Free Download

It's Turtle time—again! Those green-spirited Heroes in a Half Shell are back to kick some tail on the SNES in Konami's Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles IV: Turtles in Time.

In this installment, that disembodied alien brain, Krang, swipes the Statue of Liberty. Everyone knows the Big Apple is Turtles' Turf. So, the guys take off to recover the lost Lady Liberty, only to run smack into the sinister Saki, better known as Shredder! Shred Head zaps the anxious amphibians across several thousand years of history in thumb-burning, side-view, multi-scrolling, hack-'n'-slash action.

Check out CCC's in-depth Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles: Turtles in Time Re-Shelled review for the Xbox 360 to find out if this game is worth buying, renting, or if you should avoid it altogether.

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  2. Mutant Ninja Turtles: Turtles in Time Re-Shelled, available as a download for. Features new music and voices updated to match the 2003 TMNT series. Download Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles (2003) (Action game) - As an old school fan of the franchise, I expected more.

This game is based on the coin-op hit, Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles II: Turtles in Time. If you've pounded on that quarter-cruncher, you'll be fighting across familiar terrain. The graphics are Turtle-rrific, virtually identical to the arcade version. You can literally throw Foot Clan soldiers right out of the screen. You get some nice Mode 7 effects, especially when the Turtles warp through time. Even when a Turtle's not fighting, he'll twirl his weapon and make a menacing grimace while waiting for his next encounter. The animation scrolls smoothly, and the game's lighting quickly. Once again, Konami asks, 'What's SNES slowdown?'

The sounds don't embarrass the cart. They feature some nice effects, agonizing grunts and groans, Shredder's sinister laugh, and a catchy rendition of the Turtles cartoon's theme song.

ProTip: After you beat Rahzar in Level One, Scene Four he turns into a wimpy dog. If you're feeling sadistic, beat the dog to hear pathetic whimpers.

Does Anybody Really Know What Time It Is?

TMNTIV takes you on an awesome adventure. Michaelangelo, Donatello, Leonardo, and Raphael fight through seven murderous historical levels.

No time for a pizza break here. Each level is swarming with Shredder's Foot Clan slimeballs and mutant misfits who are led by some of your favorite Turtle villains: including Rahzar, Tokka, Metal Head, and buggy Baxter. That's just the first level!

In Level One, Scene Three's sewer section, you can nail the aquatic 'Aliens' fugitives by following them as they swim underwater and then positioning yourself at the place where they surface.

In fact, Level One features four fighting scenes through New York City. You try to beat the streets and surf the sewers. You end up at the Technodrome in a great boss battle that isn't in the coin-op. Here you fight Clanners by looking over Shredder's shoulder as he tries to sight in on you with blasters and pinchers.

Beat the Dread Shred and he still gets the last laugh as he transports you backwards and forwards in time. Your fist stop is a rowdy prehistoric romp through Level Two's dinosaur land. Beat up on Shredder's minions and you get to take on the same gang again in an old, double-mast galleon in Level Three. Sink Rocksteady and Bebop at the ship's aft, and you warp to an Old West train. All aboard are after your tail, so step lively to face Leather Head in the caboose. Next, it's fast forward to Level Five and 2020 A.D. for some anti-gravity disc surfin' a' la F-Zero. Krang's here in his massive cyborg body, but you'll have to chase him to the Level Six Star Base and beat him in his saucer to find Lady Liberty's prison. The final shell-shock occurs back at the Technodrome, where Shredder's ready to cook up some Turtle soup

  • To beat Shredder at the end of Level One, you have to toss bad guys into the screen.
  • Keep an eye out for shadows on the ground. If they aren't yours, they're trouble.
  • Escape damage from explosions in Level Two by jumping into the air as the bombs explode.
  • If you're playing Normal or Hard mode on the pirate ship, watch out for the ship passing through the background. It fires cannonballs that squash you flat!
  • In Bury My Shell in Wounded Knee, you can roll some barrels into the bad guys.

Mutant Moves

The Turtles are decked out for action with their classic weapons and new special attacks. You also get the flying side kick and special super moves from the NES games. As in the 8-bit games, the standard single-button press move is tough stuff. With this move, each turtle can fire off the appropriate move for each situation. For example, one button press might make Donatello spin his Bo staff like a propeller, swing it one-handed, or make a devastating overhead chop.

Something for Everyone

A great feature about this cart is that it dishes out plenty of top-notch action for players of any skill level and age. One or two-players can play as any Turtle. Player Two can join in at anytime. You get five continues and you can set the game for 3-, 5-, or 7-lives per continue per Turtle at skill levels of Easy, Normal, or Hard. At each continue you have the option of switching to another Turtle.

  • In a two-player game, try to trap bosses between both Turtles and then wail away.
  • You score a new life for every 200 bad guys you beat.

This cart isn't an overwhelming challenge, but it's a shell-full of fun. Easy mode is perfect fun for little kids, novices, and players who don't want to work to see the end of the game. At Normal and Hard skill levels, the thumb-burning action may temporarily turn solo players green, but even intermediate video martial artists can conquer the cart eventually. Two Turtle maniacs can really kick shell even in the Hard level. When you and your bud beat the cart, you can try Versus mode to see who's the baddest dude in the cart.

Turtles

Score IV

If nonstop hack and slashin' is your thing and you love the Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles, get this cart! This SNES game is better than its arcade counterpart overall, despite the coin-op's great four-player buy-in. All the bosses are straight out of the comics. Plus, you get two additional fighting scenes, and you don't need to feed it tokens. If you're still pondering a 16-bit commitment to Nintendo, this cart might make up your mind. Is this game great? Do Turtles have lips?

Overall rating: 6.5

Bahax Emulation has shared a new video, showing Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles: Turtles in Time Re-Shelled running in 4K resolution with 60fps on the best Playstation 3 emulator, RPCS3. TMNT: Turtles in Time Re-Shelled is an enhanced remake of the 1991 arcade game, Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles: Turtles in Time, that came out in 2009 on PS3 and Xbox 360.

According to a lot of reviews, this remake is not as good as the original 1991 arcade version of it. However, some PC gamers may be still interested in it, especially since this game never came out on the PC.

It’s also amazing witnessing this title running so smoothly on the Playstation 3 emulator. Yes, this isn’t as demanding as Red Dead Redemption, however it does show the potential of this emulator.

Turtles In Time

In order to capture this footage, Bahax Emulation used an i7 2600 3.8 Ghz (Turbo) with 16GB of DDR3 1600 Mhz HyperX RAM and a Zotac GTX 1070 8GB.

Turtles In Time Reshelled Iso

Enjoy and stay tuned for more!

RPCS3 (WIP) | TMNT: Turtles in Time Re-Shelled (4K / 60 FPS)

Watch this video on YouTube

Tmnt Turtles In Time Reshelled Pc Free Download 1 16

John Papadopoulos

Tmnt Turtles In Time Reshelled Pc Free Download Windows 7

John is the founder and Editor in Chief at DSOGaming. He is a PC gaming fan and highly supports the modding and indie communities.Before creating DSOGaming, John worked on numerous gaming websites. While he is a die-hard PC gamer, his gaming roots can be found on consoles. John loved - and still does - the 16-bit consoles, and considers SNES to be one of the best consoles. Still, the PC platform won him over consoles. That was mainly due to 3DFX and its iconic dedicated 3D accelerator graphics card, Voodoo 2. John has also written a higher degree thesis on the 'The Evolution of PC graphics cards.' Contact: Email