Namco Museum Archives Vol. 1
Eleven NES classics for the price of a large pizza, headlined by Pac-Man and one of the most unlikely demakes ever made. Nostalgia bait that occasionally earns it.
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About Namco Museum Archives Vol. 1
My first impression landing in the game selector was mild confusion: I expected arcade ROMs and got a wall of Famicom carts instead. That distinction matters more than you'd think. This is a localization of the Japanese-only Namcot Collection, and every one of its eleven games runs the NES or Famicom version of each title, not the original arcade code. If you walked in expecting the coin-op experience you'd be forgiven for feeling misled, and the Steam community's mixed rating reflects exactly that friction. Once you adjust expectations, the lineup has real range. The anchor titles, Pac-Man, Dig Dug, and Galaxian, are comfortable old friends and the emulation by M2 is tight. Splatterhouse: Wanpaku Graffiti is the collection's hidden gem: a Famicom-exclusive chibi horror platformer that was never officially sold outside Japan until this release, with genuinely funny enemy animations and boss fights that hold up. Dragon Spirit: The New Legend is a passable vertical shooter where you control a dragon and collect power-ups across escalating waves of enemies. On the weaker end, Dragon Buster has aged poorly; the side-scrolling sword combat feels sluggish in a way that even NES contemporaries handled better. Tower of Druaga is a dungeon-crawler that demands either a FAQ or a masochistic amount of patience. The standout inclusion, and the reason Vol. 1 edges out Vol. 2 for most players, is the Pac-Man Championship Edition demake. It takes the 2007 arcade remake's dual-maze, ghost-train formula and rebuilds it in 8-bit. Reviewers across the board flagged it as the most alive thing in the collection, a genuinely fresh take that could have sold separately. Save states and a rewind function soften the difficulty spikes across the whole package, which is welcome because several of these games were designed to drain quarters, not to be finished. The one complaint that dogs every review of this collection is the hollowness of the "Museum" branding. There are no galleries, no arcade flyers, no behind-the-scenes material. You get a launcher, the games, and basic display options including 4:3, zoomed, scanlines, and anti-aliasing toggle. Compared to what the original Namcot Collection shipped with on Switch in Japan, and compared to rivals like Atari 50, this feels stripped. M2 did solid work on the emulation itself, having brought similar care to the Castlevania and Contra anniversary collections, but Bandai Namco didn't give them much to dress it up with. Bottom line: the game list skews toward casual arcade sessions of five to twenty minutes each. Nobody is completing Dragon Buster in one sitting by choice. The collection suits short-burst play: boot Pac-Man, chase a high score, flip over to Dig Dug, call it a night. Players hunting specifically for the Japan-only Splatterhouse or the Championship Edition demake get genuine value for money. Everyone else should wait for a sale. Alex, Scout Team
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Game Info
- Developer
- M2 Co.,LTD
- Publisher
- BANDAI NAMCO Entertainment
- Release Date
- Jun 17, 2020