Dear Ebay, It's good that the item is absolutely complete, that along with the game cartridge being present the box and game instructions are also present with the inner case also being present. The game's graphics are good and the game play is fun and that's important in my view as a retro gamer as it helps making the video game fun and enjoyable to play. In terms of what's bad about the product, the only thing that I can say is this video game can be difficult to play and the reason why I say this is I was getting outscored by the game opponent while I scored no goals in return and this undercut the fun I was experiencing in playing this video game. Sincerely, Kevin Stroik
Verified purchase: Yes | Condition: Pre-owned
Push-Over is one of the top puzzle games for the Super Nintendo. Each level becomes more challenging as you progress through the levels. You play as G.I. Ant who must rearrange the dominoes in an attempt to knock the final piece in each level. This allows allows you to move to the next level. You must progress though 100 levels of gameplay provide before reaching the end.
Verified purchase: Yes | Condition: Pre-owned
First, let me say that I gave it four stars purely based on how the music starts to wear on you a bit. I would have given five stars if it had more than one track per group of puzzles or if the tracks didn't wear out their welcome as quickly. That said, on with the review... There are a great many puzzlers that you just know, either by name or by the flood of clones they spawned: Lemmings, The Incredible Machine, Lode Runner, Tetris, Black Box, Oxyd, Bejewelled, Sudoku, Minesweeper... the list goes on. For some reason (fumbled marketing?), this game missed its place on that list. The simplest way to describe Push-over is "Dominoes on steroids". You play as G.I. Ant and your job is to move the dominoes you can reach and then push one (and only one) so that, when the falling stops, all the dominoes have fallen and the "trigger" domino fell last, then leave through the exit which opens. The "on steroids" comes from the magical behaviours that only digital dominoes can have. In addition to ones that simply fall, there are tumblers (which tumble end-over-end until they hit another domino), stoppers (which won't fall when hit and will cause tumblers to double back), splitters (which clone themselves and fall in both directions when hit), exploders (useful for opening holes in the floor), delays (exactly what the name says), bridgers (to help tumbers cross gaps), ascenders, and vanishers. The games sprites are appropriate for the Super Nintendo and the music isn't bad (the instruments sound better than in the YouTube videos I've seen of the Amiga version)... there's just not enough of it. If you're a puzzle fan, give this a try.Read full review
Verified purchase: Yes | Condition: Pre-owned
this game is a domino-type puzzle game. there are different kinds of dominoes set up which do different things and the player has to figure out how to knock them all over. (its more difficult than it sounds). the levels get progressivly harder and if you get "game over", there is a code to put in to bring you back to where you were. (which saves you from having to start the game from the very beginning). it will make you think, which is good or bad depending on what you're into. kids will probably not like this game. its not about action, its about trying to figure out stuff. i would compare it to "the incredible machine" in that way.
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