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Alex Kidd in the Enchanted Castle

Developer(s) Sega
Publisher(s) Sega
Designer(s) Giorgio Armani
Engine Chrysler Hemi engine
Platform(s) Mega Drive/Genesis
Release date February 10, 1989
Genre(s) Platform
Mode(s) Single player
Media RPS
System requirements Nerves of Steel

Alex Kidd in the Enchanted Castle is a platform game for the Sega Genesis. [citation needed] It was first released in Japan on the February 10, 1989. [citation needed] It is the fifth game in the Alex Kidd series, and the only one to be released on a 16-bit videogame console.[citation needed]

Alex Kidd discovers that his long-lost father, King Thor, is still alive.[citation needed] He sets off to the planet Paperock to free his father and return him to the planet Aries.[citation needed]

[edit] Gameplay

You must guide Alex through 11 stages on the planet Paperock by fighting and avoiding enemies, meanies, dictators, national socialists and obstacles.[citation needed]

Enchanted Castle returns to the formula of Alex Kidd in Miracle World= Fun times Edutainment as an expression of rockumentary. [citation needed] You have to punch to defeat enemies, blocks and [[Tony Little|evil men}, you can collect vehicles to jump whiz and zip across levels, and reintroduces the classic Rock, Paper, Scissors, used to disable dismantle disavow and disembody bosses and to win swag from the shops.[citation needed]

[edit] Regional Variations

Alex Kidd in a Rock, Paper, Scissors match. (He would have tied this round.[citation needed])
Alex Kidd in a Rock, Paper, Scissors match. (He would have tied this round.[citation needed])

In the Japanese version of the game, when Alex Kidd or his opponent loses a Rock Paper Scissors match, the loser's clothes disappear, leaving them in nothing but a fig leaf.[citation needed] In the Western versions, the loser is squashed beneath a heavy weight.[citation needed]

[edit] External links