▲
1
▼
The goal of the game's story is to kill the 1.2 billion Red Communists that invaded Hong Kong. However, it is practically impossible to achieve that goal normally in-game due to Chin having only one hit point, the fact that the score meter will visually loop back to 1000 after reaching 8888 points making it hard to tell what your actual score is (this could be due in part to the number 9 being nonexistent in the game's score counter), and that, hypothetically, if you killed one enemy per second (while also accounting for the extra time it takes to defeat the game's only boss, Tong Shau Ping, multiple times), it would take around 38 years to reach a score of 1.2 billion in one sitting. The only quick way to reach a score of 1.2 billion is to cheat by manually changing the score value in a memory scanner/debugger. Doing this makes the score counter stop properly displaying the score, and causes the continuously looping theme song "I Love Beijing Tiananmen" to stop playing due to that high of a score overloading the game's memory.
This trivia has been marked as "Not Safe for Work".
It may not be appropriate for all visitors and definitely isn't appropriate for work or school environments.
Click here to unhide it.
It may not be appropriate for all visitors and definitely isn't appropriate for work or school environments.
Click here to unhide it.
▲
1
▼
▲
1
▼
According to an interview published by the South China Morning Post, Yoshihisa "Kowloon" Kurosawa stated that the game came to be because he wanted to make the worst game possible as a mockery to the game industry at the time, being completely dominated by Nintendo and Sega. Since Kurosawa wasn't proficient in his programming skills, he had an anonymous Enix employee help him out, with the game being made in two days.
After completion, Kurosawa made some merchandise through articles written under pseudonyms for underground gaming magazines, and set up a mail-order service to sell the game.
After completion, Kurosawa made some merchandise through articles written under pseudonyms for underground gaming magazines, and set up a mail-order service to sell the game.
Related Games
Joe & Mac
Super Ghouls'n Ghosts
Clock Tower
Disney's Goof Troop
Dino City
Final Fight 2
Demon's Crest
Final Fantasy V
Super Bomberman
Kirby's Super Star Stacker
Bushi Seiryuu-den: Futari no Yuusha
Mario's Super Picross
The Legend of Zelda: A Link to the Past
Lufia II: Rise of the Sinistrals
Bust-A-Move
Brawl Brothers
Pocky & Rocky
Castlevania: Dracula X
Yoshi's Safari
Super Mario FX
Super Castlevania IV
Final Fight Guy
Hokuto no Ken 6: Gekitou Denshouken - Haou he no Michi
Super Mario World 2: Yoshi's Island
Front Mission
Tactics Ogre: Let Us Cling Together
Hebereke no Oishii Puzzle ha Irimasen ka
Mega Man 7
The Legend of the Mystical Ninja
Donkey Kong Country 3: Dixie Kong's Double Trouble!
Street Fighter II
Fatal Fury Special
Albert Odyssey: Legend of Eldean
Disney's Toy Story
The Lion King
Shin Megami Tensei II
Arcana
Cool Spot
Chrono Trigger
SimCity 2000
Special Tee Shot
Donkey Kong Country 2: Diddy's Kong Quest
Slam Dunk: Yonkyou Gekitotsu!!
Vegas Stakes
Mega Man X2
Theme Park
Super Smash T.V.
ActRaiser 2
F-Zero
Super Mario World