Decap Attack: Difference between revisions

Everything About Fiction You Never Wanted to Know.
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* [[Advancing Wall of Doom|Advancing Totem Pole Of Doom]] - Stage 3-1.
* [[Advancing Wall of Doom|Advancing Totem Pole Of Doom]] - Stage 3-1.
* [[Bedsheet Ghost]] - Some enemies.
* [[Bedsheet Ghost]] - Some enemies.
* [[Bigfoot Sasquatch and Yeti]] - The sixth boss is a big, friendly-looking yeti.
* [[Bigfoot, Sasquatch, and Yeti]] - The sixth boss is a big, friendly-looking yeti.
* [[Chain Reaction Destruction]] - How are bosses destroyed? By having multiple small red explosions cover their nonexistent body after flashing a lot.
* [[Chain-Reaction Destruction]] - How are bosses destroyed? By having multiple small red explosions cover their nonexistent body after flashing a lot.
* [[Contractual Boss Immunity]] - The potions that destroy every enemy on screen don't work on the bosses.
* [[Contractual Boss Immunity]] - The potions that destroy every enemy on screen don't work on the bosses.
* [[Dem Bones]] - Among the enemies there are living fishbones.
* [[Dem Bones]] - Among the enemies there are living fishbones.

Revision as of 01:31, 9 April 2014

Decap Attack was a weird Platform Game released for Sega Genesis/Megadrive in 1991, and probably the only game in existence which starred a headless mummy. However, it began its life as a totally unrelated Japanese game called Magical Hat Flying Turbo Adventure, based upon the Anime Magical Hat. It received a total uplifting before coming to US and Europe, and became a wacky horror adventure set in an island shaped like a human body.

The story is, as always, pretty simple: the demon Max D. Cap emerges from the underworld and breaks Body Island into seven parts. Mad Scientist Frank N. Stein creates a headless mummy named Chuck for the sole purpose to try and defeat Max and rescue the island.

Decap Attack was adapted into a long-running comic strip in British magazine Sonic the Comic, which brought the zaniness of the game Up to Eleven.


The game provides examples of:

The comic provides examples of: