Arcade Laserdisc: Cobra Command (1984 Data East)

A shooting game where you are a pilot ordered to get rid of a group of terrorists committing crimes all over the world. You pilot your ultra modern helicopter to confront your enemies and part of your mission you must carry out. You pilot a fully armed helicopter to take down your enemy helicopters, planes, tanks, and ships in order to terminate their stronghold area. You fly through forests, canyons, desert ruins, and out to pacific ocean through New York City. One of the hardest laser disc games by Data East I’ve ever played. This game plays better on an actual arcade cabinet than on PC. It’s does not feel the same when playing with a PC Game-pad or Xbox 360 Controller. Played and recorded with MAME built-in uncompressed AVI Output (known as internal AVI movie recording). This game is playable in MAME under the clone set Cobra Command (. 3 Hardware). The main set Cobra Command (Data East LD) does not work so you have to play using the . 3 Hardware version. Be sure to have to have a fast powerful PC to play this game in MAME. If not, you need to play this game in Daphne Emulator instead. Gameplay starts at 2:18 Note: Used infinite lives cheat and no overheating cheat. I do die a lot in this game so there’s a jump in the score and all failures have been edited out. I also had to use select starting stage cheat to pick up where I left off since I was not able to finish the game in one day as it’s time consuming and no save states are supported so there’s a jump on the score on mission 10. Once you beat the game, it goes straight to the ending with credits. But I added death scenes in it in case anyone wants to see it. Death Scenes - 19:21 (not a comprehensive list but all of the ones I’ve seen when I died so much in this game) Ending - 21:19 Disclaimer: Copyright Disclaimer Under Section 107 of the Copyright Act in 1976; Allowance is made for “Fair Use“ for purposes such as criticism, comment, news reporting, teaching, scholarship, and use is a use permitted by copyright statute that might otherwise be infringing. Non-profit, educational or personal use tips the balance in favor of fair use.
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