April 3, 1996
Burn Cycle announced for the Sega Saturn
Phillips has announced that they will be releasing their CD-I hit game Burn: Cycle for the Sega Saturn. Burn: Cycle is generally regarded to as the best game ever for the CD-I.
did that ever happen!?
Burn:Cycle announced for the Sega Saturn
- Ruekov
- Karmic Church Disciple
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Goo[d]gle have answer:
Tech aspects. Sega saturn isn't a FMV (real actors) console, for this reason few fmv games (foxhunt for example) was cancelled.
For luky (or disaster), digital Pictures with her "Intravideo" system works fine in sega saturn systems .
http://gamerland.com/games/cgi-bin/show ... i?id=11017Burn: Cycle unreleased
for Saturn
Published by: Philips
Release date: Unreleased
Country: US
Media type: CD
The Saturn version of this game, originally released on the CD-i, was apparently completed, but it contained more video than the Saturn could handle. The game works fine on the developer's console, so Philips didn't realize their was a problem until Sega checked it out.
The game is set in a cyberpunk world and you play as an information pirate who mistakenly downloaded a virus into his brain. Now you've got to find a cure.
Tech aspects. Sega saturn isn't a FMV (real actors) console, for this reason few fmv games (foxhunt for example) was cancelled.
For luky (or disaster), digital Pictures with her "Intravideo" system works fine in sega saturn systems .
- Ruekov
- Karmic Church Disciple
- Posts: 110
- Joined: Sun Jul 24, 2005 10:38 am
- Location: Lleida, Spain
- Contact:
Yessss!!! view this pageDevin wrote:Hmm, i'm not convinced. Remember we shouldn't believe everything posted on the net as truth!!.
http://www.mrxswebpage.com/Spanish And Italian Are The Same Language
PD:
http://www.gamespot.com/gamespot/featur ... links.html
Gamespot confirms...
Burn:Cycle
Platform: Saturn
Publisher: Philips
The Basics
Burn: Cycle was the Saturn version of the Philips CDI game by the same name. The setting would have been a William Gibson cyberpunk future where you, as info-pirate Sol Cutter, had downloaded a computer virus into your brain and must find a cure before it destroys you.
WHAT HAPPENED?
The game was all but finished when Sega informed Philips that the title exceeded the amount of video the system could handle by several minutes. The game tested fine on the developer's systems, so Philips wasn't aware of the problem until Sega got its hands on Burn: Cycle.