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April The game was followed by various sequels. By creating an account, you verify that you are at least 13 years of age, and have read and agree to the Comicbook. Getting smashed by an enemy will also flatten you into a pancake for a few seconds, although you can still move and attack while squished. Embed Game.
The final boss is also different and there is only one ending. The NES and Game Boy versions are much downgraded versions of the original arcade version, and lack the option of choosing levels. The game was followed by various sequels.
Lost in the Tropics, which added light role-playing aspects to the series. Jump to Content. ClassicReload Login. Caveman Ninja.
Fullscreen No gamepads detected. Plug in and press a button to use it. Rate it: How to play: Game year: It controls better than the SNES game but obviously lacks the expanded levels. The graphics suffer a bit due to the color palette, but it still looks pretty good.
You no longer lose health over time, either. It was published by Takara and ported by Eden Entertainment Software.
The NES port is drastically scaled back, with tiny sprites and completely redesigned levels. There are five stages total, which are divided into two sub-areas, each punctuated by a boss battle.
The first stage is nothing but a long, straight plain. The graphics overall are pretty bad, despite some very impressive parallax scrolling in certain areas. The Game Boy port is based off the arcade version, again, although the levels are slightly reworked and expanded. The computer versions are surprisingly decent.
The Amiga version is limited to 32 colors, while the IBM PC version uses full color graphics that are very accurate to the arcade. Both play very well, too, despite the downgraded sound in both cases.
Other than some concept art, nothing else was revealed before it was canceled. This entry is part 1 of 4 in the series Joe and Mac. The adventure begins with rogue cavemen making off with your girlfriends a trope for a game such as this , forcing Joe and Mac to leap into action as they take on human, dinosaur and other foes in the hopes of saving the day.
Your best bet is the boomerang, which has both speed and precision going for it.
Just be careful. If you die, you lose it and have to start with the hammer again.
Joe & Mac also known as Caveman Ninja, is a platform game released for the arcades by Data East. It was later adapted for the Super NES, Mega. Players control Joe and Mac, two cavemen who fight against enemy cavemen and dinosaurs using projectile weapons. The object of the game is to help Joe.
The game is rather short, as you can go through what it has in about a 30 minute time frame. That does leave Caveman Ninja short when it comes to replay value, as there are no DIP switches to play around with or extra games to play.