T2: The Arcade Game

T2: The Arcade Game

released on Oct 31, 1991
by Midway

T2: The Arcade Game

released on Oct 31, 1991
by Midway

As the title states, this is the home conversion of the arcade rail-shooter based on the film Terminator 2: Judgement Day. Up to two players shoot through future and present levels as robotic killers reprogrammed to serve the human resistance. Both players wield a machine gun with infinite ammo that lowers its firing rate (overheats) as it is continuously fired. A secondary weapon (missile launchers in the future, shotguns in the present) has limited ammo but deals heavy damage. Powerups inside the game world include secondary weapon ammo and coolant for the machine guns, and are shot to be collected. T2: The Arcade Game features seven levels based on specific scenes or general concepts in the film. The first four levels act as a prelude, as the player guns down waves of metal Terminators across a post-apocalyptic Battlefield, a besieged Human Hideout, and through the security checkpoints of the enemy supercomputer SkyNet. After destroying the computer, players travel back in time to protect John and Sarah Connor, while also destroying every scrap of SkyNet research at the headquarters of its manufacturer. From there, players must fend off the indestructible T-1000 until the final showdown in the Steel Mill. Assets from the movie are used when possible, such as voice clips from Arnold Schwarzenegger, and close-up digital stills of Robert Patrick for the final battle against the T-1000. The Genesis and SNES versions also support lightguns (the Menacer and Super Scope, respectively).


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This game was a feature on every arcade for a solid decade, and while it's clearly not super well-made (or fair), there's enough spectacle and haptic feedback to make a co-op run feel like a good time, however far you manage to get. The hardware kind of carried it.

Purely evil game designed to take money from people at the arcades. It is not well made at all, and only wants to take your money.

That being said, the visuals, sounds, and budget are exquisite. It's a shame that they're tied to a money grabbing experience.

The ONLY reason people still talk about this game and hail it as a "arcade classic" or a "light gun great" is because of nostalgia. This game blows and is not fun.

If the arcade game is a 4/10 the genesis version is at best a 2/10