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I’ve played with a lot of mini arcade machines, but none as impressive as New Wave Toys’ RepliCade X Dragon’s Lair. The incredibly detailed 1/6 scale cabinet features an authentic scoreboard ...
Dragon's Lair was originally released for arcades in the 1980s. Writing on Kickstarter, Bluth and Goldman said it's Dragon's Lair, not any of their films, that fans know them best for.
New Wave Toys has a new arcade cabinet on the way as they are releasing a Dragon's Lair x RepliCade 1/6-scale arcade cabinet. This is a pretty awesome replica of what is essentially a 12" tall ...
In 1983, most arcade games either featured crude bitmap graphics or sleek futuristic vectors. Not Dragon’s Lair. Utilising laserdisc technology, it was like an interactive Disney cartoon, charging you ...
Dragon’s Lair was different because players didn’t control Dirk’s movements, they controlled his choices. The fact that it utilized laserdisc technology made it pricier than other arcade ...
Back in 1983, the original Dragon's Lair arcade game created by Rick Dyer, Don Bluth, Gary Goldman, John Pomeroy, and Chris Stone represented a remarkable technical achievement, as it used laser ...
Most of the Dragon's Lair visual standards are here too. All of the cut-scenes were hand-drawn by Don Bluth and each area is a faithful recreation of the arcade original.
A listing on the PEGI website has outed Dragon's Lair, the 80's laserdisc arcade game, as getting the Xbox 360 treatment. The game has been adapted to several platforms over the years, from PC to ...
The Arcade mode was implemented to maintain the current hardcore fan base of Dragon's Lair®, which is quite large in numbers, and naturally also because never before has there been an arcade ...
Now Dragon’s Lair 3D is getting tantalizingly close to release, and publisher Ubi Soft has just launched a new Web site to publicize the game. And as we reported in 1999, the game is still being ...
Dragon’s Lair has been credited with turning around the “arcade slump” of 1983-1985 and is also noted for being the first arcade offering to cost 50 cents per play.