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Menace Beach

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Menace Beach
Menace Beach box art
Developer(s)Color Dreams[1]
Publisher(s)Color Dreams[1]
Hacker International (Asia)
Composer(s)Vance Kozik, Roger Deforest
Platform(s)NES/Family Computer
Release
Genre(s)Side scroller[1]
Mode(s)Single-player

Menace Beach is a video game released for the Nintendo Entertainment System by Color Dreams in 1990. Like all Color Dreams games, Menace Beach was not officially licensed by Nintendo. It was re-released as part of the Maxivision 15-in-1 multicart.

Gameplay

The player controls a skateboarding hero whose girlfriend, Bunny, has been kidnapped by Demon Dan. An introduction screen shows Bunny shackled and pleading for help. The hero must use his skateboard and any objects he finds, such as balloons, frogs, bombs, and bottles, to defeat ninjas, clowns, and disgruntled dock workers before finally confronting the villainous Demon Dan. Between levels, the girlfriend's clothes rot, and when the first level is completed, she is in underwear.

Sunday Funday

Menace Beach was re-released as Sunday Funday.

Color Dreams was renamed Wisdom Tree and Menace Beach was redesigned with a Christian theme as Sunday Funday in 1995, the last NES game in North America. The player controls a skateboarding hero who is late for Sunday school. The hero must use his skateboard and any objects he finds, such as balloons, grapefruits, and newspapers, to defeat bullies, clowns, and businessmen who impede his path to Sunday school.

Sunday Funday features gameplay identical to Menace Beach.

The hero carries a Bible in Sunday Funday, but not in Menace Beach. The hero's girlfriend from Menace Beach is replaced by a fully clothed Sunday school teacher.

The game cartridge includes two other games: an arcade-style puzzle game titled Fish Fall, a rendition of an unreleased Color Dreams game called Free Fall which was interspersed with Bible verses, and a sing-along of "The Ride", a song by Christian pop band 4Him.

The game was released in Asia as Miss Peach World (ミスピーチワールド, Misu Pīchi Wārudo). It replaces the player character with a female and includes eroge images between levels, although contrary to the title and label artwork, it does not feature Princess Peach. The music, and some graphics and level backgrounds, were changed.[2]

References

  1. ^ a b c d "Release information". GameFAQs. Retrieved 2008-12-21.
  2. ^ "Miss Peach World has finally reached the internet. Rejoice...?". September 2017.