Pac-Man was released in 1993 by Namco Hometek, but it is a different port entirely, and is commonly considered inferior to Tengen's version. It should be noted that this game, while licensed by Namco, was not licensed by Nintendo. If you’re playing the SNES and Sega Genesis versions, you’ll see the Pac-Man family on a beach with the words “The End” above instead. Pac-Man wave goodbye at the player then many Baby Pac-Men appear, running around the screen. An "Act 4" is displayed, where Pac-Man and Ms. The game ends on Level 32, even in Arcade mode. Also, the player can continue up to four times after they get a game over. Pac-Man's speed seemingly based on the speed-up chip) can be enabled or disabled. The game can be set to Easy, Normal, Hard, or Crazy difficulty, and the "Pac Booster" (changes Ms. There are several difficulty/speed options as well. The classic "alternating" 2P mode is also available. In this mode, each player has their own score as well as a shared combined score. In co-op mode, both players are able to eat the ghosts when one eats a power pellet. In this mode, each player competes for the high score. In competitive mode, when one player eats a Power Pellet however, the other Pac-Man will frown, and only the pellet-enabled Pac can eat the ghosts. Pac-Man and Pac-Man appear on-screen at the same time, and can work together to clear the maze. Other big features of this version are two player co-op and competitive modes. Arcade - the four mazes from the arcade game.There are four selectable gamemodes, each with their own unique maze layouts. What makes this port stand out are its many new mazes. It is a near-perfect rendition of the original, and is rather technically impressive for NES hardware. Pac-Man through the maze, collecting dots and avoiding the Ghosts. At first, the game appears to be identical to the arcade original.
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