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Games releasing this month

5/2
Endless Ocean Luminous
5/2
Abiotic Factor
5/6
Hades II
5/8
V Rising
5/9
Animal Well
5/9
Little Kitty, Big City
5/9
Pac-Man Mega Tunnel Battle: Chomp Champs
5/10
Classic Marathon
5/14
The Rogue Prince of Persia
5/16
Lorelei and the Laser Eyes
5/20
Multiversus
5/23
World of Goo 2
5/23
Paper Mario: The Thousand-Year Door (Remake)
5/23
Duck Detective: The Secret Salami
5/29
Squad Busters
5/31
F1 24
Deadly Towers is an action role-playing game co-developed by Lenar and Tamtex for Irem as a software title for the Nintendo Entertainment System (NES). It was released in Japan on December 15, 1986, and in North America in September of the following year. In Japan, Deadly Towers was titled Mashō (魔鐘), literally meaning "Evil Bell". It is a pun of the word mashō (魔性), meaning "devilishness", and in keeping with this theme, the Japanese cartridge contained a red LED at the top which illuminated when turned on. Irem intended the game's English-language title to be Hell's Bells, but Nintendo of America refused to issue the game a Nintendo Seal of Quality unless Broderbund changed the name. Rubas's palace is presented in oblique perspective. The nonlinear gameplay is comparable to that of The Legend of Zelda. In most rooms of the palace, the screen does not scroll. Outside the palace and in the room containing the sacred flame, the room scrolls sideways; in bell towers, it scrolls vertically. Prince Myer can walk in eight directions, and he attacks by throwing a sword. The player earns coins (a currency called ludder) by killing monsters; ludder can be exchanged for new equipment at various shops. The shops are in fixed locations, but their inventories can change.

152d @joel Game added to Channel 3 library