Crazy Land (Prototype)

From Hidden Palace
Revision as of 00:00, December 10, 2022 by Hidden Palace (talk | contribs) (XML import)
(diff) ← Older revision | Latest revision (diff) | Newer revision → (diff)
Jump to navigation Jump to search
Title Screen
Crazy Land (Prototype)
Build date May 27, 1991
Build name N/A
Dump status Released
Dumped by Video Game History Foundation
Released by Hidden Palace
File release date December 9, 2022
Origin EPROM cartridge
Lot Ed Semrad Lot
Labels CRAZY LAND CHR 5/27 6017

CRAZY LAND PRG 5/27 3BDB

Game Crazy Land
System NES
Genre Action
Final build JP N/A
EU May 26, 1993
US Unreleased
Release date JP Aug 9, 1991
EU 1993
US Unreleased
Release date Unreleased
Download Crazy Land (Prototype) (info)
Error: The download file provided does not exist, please upload it or fix the file name if it's incorrect.

A prototype of Crazy Land for the NES.

Notes

  • Unreleased US localization of "Doki! Doki! Yuuenchi: Crazy Land Daisakusen". Also released in Europe as "The Trolls in Crazyland".
  • The title screen and copyright information appear to mimic the Japanese version, for the mostpart. The logo is stylised differently to both released versions and (obviously) refers to the game by a different name. Most of the visuals are the same, though the skyline was redrawn somewhat. The following additional information which is not present in the Japanese release is included on the title screen:
LICENSEE NTVIC
LICENSED BY
NINTENDO OF AMERICA INC
  • Player character matches the one used in the Japanese version.
  • Level layouts appear to be closer to the Japanese version's layouts.
  • Miscellaneous Notes:
    • Game is emulatable: Yes (as of December 9, 2022).

Screenshots

Origin

Files

File Type Date Size Comment SHA-1
Crazy Land (Prototype).nes ROM file 2018-01-02 07:00:00 256 KB ROM file. 26e24f11a2197f041a18d07850341ec59b9c1482

Acknowledgments

A huge thanks to Hwd45 for researching this prototype! Big thanks to Ed Semrad for providing an opportunity for this prototype and many more to be preserved. Huge special thanks to Frank Cifaldi from the Video Game History Foundation (VGHF) for dumping and providing the prototypes!

See also