The actual game itself is pretty much one long string of holding down the fire button and mowing down hundreds of identical soldiers.
Instead of a regular lightgun, the game uses a mounted machine gun that controls a crosshair on screen. If you play this game emulated, however, the best choice will probably be using a mouse, since that’ll offer you better accuracy.Įach level basically involves generally wandering forward on rails, shooting at every enemy that pops up on screen before they take too much energy from you. This isn’t like Lethal Enforcers where the enemies will give you a second or two before they fire, instead they’ll just start blasting at you the second they appear on screen. Aside from your standard rapid-fire stream of bullets, there’s also a separate button. While in most other games like this, it would have you fire missiles or something along those lines, in this game you fire CDs out of your gun like buzzsaws. And you’re going to need them by the hundreds to have any chance of taking down the bosses, too, since the game makes you destroy every single part of them before they’ll actually die.Īside from that, though, there’s not much weapon variety at all. While your gun and your CDs can be temporarily powered up, (turning them into laserdiscs, of course) there’s not much to lessen the growing monotony of the game besides its wackiness. The game gives the illusion of branching paths, but a lot of them aren’t much more than a detour that puts you back on the main path, after making you kill a few dozen more soldiers than usual. After the second level, you can also choose from one of three missions in any order, although you have to clear them all to reach the final level. You’d expect a game of this pedigree to be a quarter muncher, and your health bar is more of a general indicator of how long you get to play the game before it wants another credit. Lethal enforcers snes without light guns full#Īll the enemies fire at you the instant they appear on screen, and bosses shoot so many projectiles that there’s no hope of shooting them all down.