A childhood favorite of mine! You choose between either the Thunder Megazord or the Mega Tigerzord, and fight your way through enemies until the final battle on the moon!
Story/gameplay: The story and gameplay is typical of a fighting game: You got through each level fighting an opponent until you reach the final boss(it's TOTALLY Lord Zedd, *wink, wink*), using a variety of moves and finishers. If you're looking for depth or engaging story-telling, you're going to be disappointed, and I question why you'd look for it in a Power Rangers game. As for the gameplay and controls, I can't complain too much. Again, typical fighter, but the controls are easy to figure out and there are other features aside from the basic story line, such as a versus mode where you can go against other Megazords and monsters.
Graphics: For an SNES, the graphics look pretty good. The colors are bright and vibrant, the backgrounds look great and detailed, and the effects for when the blows land and characters crash on the ground have an anime-style to them and are satisfying.
Sound: Again, the sound looks great. From the original MMPR theme playing at the title screen, to the rest of the sound track, to sound effects of the Megazords and monsters fighting each other and performing special moves just sounds epic.
As a Toku fan, I've fallen away from the Power Ranger fandom since my childhood. However, the Megazords, whom I thought were the real stars of the franchise and thought of them as my favorite Power Rangers myself, hold a very special place in my heart. And this game is basically a tribute to that!
A childhood favorite of mine! You choose between either the Thunder Megazord or the Mega Tigerzord, and fight your way through enemies until the final battle on the moon!
Story/gameplay: The story and gameplay is typical of a fighting game: You got through each level fighting an opponent until you reach the final boss(it's TOTALLY Lord Zedd, *wink, wink*), using a variety of moves and finishers. If you're looking for depth or engaging story-telling, you're going to be disappointed, and I question why you'd look for it in a Power Rangers game. As for the gameplay and controls, I can't complain too much. Again, typical fighter, but the controls are easy to figure out and there are other features aside from the basic story line, such as a versus mode where you can go against other Megazords and monsters.
Graphics: For an SNES, the graphics look pretty good. The colors are bright and vibrant, the backgrounds look great and detailed, and the effects for when the blows land and characters crash on the ground have an anime-style to them and are satisfying.
Sound: Again, the sound looks great. From the original MMPR theme playing at the title screen, to the rest of the sound track, to sound effects of the Megazords and monsters fighting each other and performing special moves just sounds epic.
As a Toku fan, I've fallen away from the Power Ranger fandom since my childhood. However, the Megazords, whom I thought were the real stars of the franchise and thought of them as my favorite Power Rangers myself, hold a very special place in my heart. And this game is basically a tribute to that!