Terminator 2: Judgment Day

Terminator 2: Judgment Day

£3,295.00

Terminator 2: Judgment Day or T2 is a gun shooting video game based on the film of the same name, produced by Midway Manufacturing Company for video arcades in 1991.

Developed in tandem with the movie, several actors from the film reprise their roles for the game and are featured as part of the game's photorealistic digitized graphics. The game's plot largely follows that of the film, casting up to two players as the T-800 "terminator" cyborg from the film, sent back in time to protect John Connor from assassination by the T-1000 terminator.

Running on the Williams/Midway Y-Unit arcade hardware and Midway X-Unit, the game allows one or two players to assume the role of a T-800 cyborg programmed to protect John and Sarah Connor and the resistance fighters against the Skynet offensive. Gameplay is set in a first-person perspective.

The game consists of seven stages, with the first four set during the human/machine war in 2029 and the last three during John's childhood in the 1990s.

  • Cross a battlefield to reach a hideout for human refugees.

  • Travel through the hideout, protecting the refugees against Terminators and other attackers.

  • Fend off Terminators and hunter-killer aircraft as John drives to the main Skynet facility in a pickup truck.

  • Invade the facility and destroy its main computer, after which the player's character is transported back in time.

  • Destroy as much equipment in the Cyberdyne research lab as possible while employees and SWAT officers fight back. The amount of equipment destroyed determines whether Cyberdyne's research will continue and, if the player completes the game, whether Judgment Day has been averted.

  • Fight off the T-1000 as it uses a police chopper and tanker truck to attack the SWAT van in which Sarah and John are escaping to a steel mill.

  • Shoot holes in the tanker to douse the T-1000 in liquid nitrogen until it freezes solid; fight off mill workers as John flees through the mill; then knock the T-1000 into a vat of molten steel to destroy it before it can kill John.

If John is killed in the third, sixth, or seventh stages, the player suffers a large health penalty and must replay that stage from the beginning.

The player's primary weapon is a machine gun, which fires in fully automatic mode as long as the trigger is pulled. Pressing a button on the side fires a secondary weapon (missiles in 2029, shotgun shells in the 1990s). Gun ammunition is unlimited; however, an on-screen power gauge slowly decreases with extended firing, causing the rate of fire to slow down. The gauge refills when the gun is not in use. Other health and weapon power-ups are available throughout the game.

At the end of each stage, the player scores bonus points for the number and type of enemies destroyed and the amount of damage done but loses points for every human casualty.

This machine was originally used in commercial environments such as arcades, public houses, and amusements.

When you place your order with us, we will take the machine out of storage and bring it into our workshop, where technicians will fully clean and test all the components to ensure they are in working order as well as making any repairs that may be necessary.

Because of the age of these machines and that fact that they were originally used in commercial environments, it is possible that there may be signs of cosmetic wear and tear. However, we feel that these slight imperfections only add to the patina of this classic machine and helps to tell a story of its past life.

Please understand that some items may take up to 28 days for a full refurbishment.

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This machine was originally used in commercial environments such as arcades, public houses, and amusements.

When you place your order with us, we will take the machine out of storage and bring it into our workshop, where technicians will fully clean and test all the components to ensure they are in working order as well as making any repairs that may be necessary.

Because of the age of these machines and that fact that they were originally used in commercial environments, it is possible that there may be signs of cosmetic wear and tear. However, we feel that these slight imperfections only add to the patina of this classic machine and helps to tell a story of its past life.

Please understand that some items may take up to 28 days for a full refurbishment.

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Star Wars Arcade1Up Video Game Cabinet (OUT OF STOCK)

from £795.00