I’ve been so busy at of late gamespot took the back burner, so to speak, for the last month. I didn’t even see that I made level 11 ‘til I was level 12, lol. I relies is took a month but with basically no activity how is it possible to gain more then a full level? But…no complaints here. I am however starting to wonder when it becomes harder to level, I hear people saying 20 is the worst. Anyone one know? I don’t want to forget my gamespot level lore so here we go.
Atomic Punk
Something like a portable version of Bomberman, you all remember that game…right? It was a couple of bomber games in one for the the Game Boy. That’s right “Game Boy” not a color, advanced, DS, or any of the several other versions.
Rad Racer
![](http://img.gamespot.com/gamespot/images/2003/all/boxshots1/587550.jpg)
Rad Racer, known as Highway Star in Japan on the Famicom, was a racing game made for the Nintendo Entertainment System. It was programmed by Nasir Gebelli, designed and supervised by Hironobu Sakaguchi, and featured music by Nobuo Uematsu, all of whom later contributed to Final Fantasy in similar roles. It was licensed by Squaresoft in 1987. Since the release of the NES in 1985 to 1987 few racing games existed for the NES. Rad Racer had a simulated 3D landscape and excellent graphics, inspired in part by Sega's Out Run. The game has a special 3D mode, where 3D glasses (packed in with game) could be worn to give the illusion of 3D. In 1990, Rad Racer II was released. It differed little from the first version, and players considered the gameplay inferior so it was not as successful as the first version. The game appeared in an infamous scene in The Wizard, where Lucas Barton (Jimmy's rival) uses a Power Glove to play through the first stage of the game, a feat in itself considering the much noted unreliability of the device. Rad Racer is Uematsu's 15th work of video game music composition. This is Uematsu's last work before the inception of the Final Fantasy video game franchise.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rad_Racer