Other than the price and it being a bit too goofy looking, what's wrong with Tonma?
It's a good game, but like Splatterhouse, it's pointless to purchase it when there is a far superior arcade version.
No, that doesn't make any sense. These games are fun, in and of themselves. These games exist and deserve some respect.
WARNING: Rant Incoming
You know I love you. This rant is directed at everyone in the cosmos, not you, specifically. You are just the messenger.
THE MYTH OF PURITY
Fun and "purity" are *not* mutually exclusive. Yet, many folks flatly state that "X version is superior to Y version", thus X is the only one worth one's time.
According to this mentality, all you need is "the purest form of a game"...which is bullshite because I HAVE AN APPETITE FOR ALL PERMUTATIONS OF A GAME. Why? Because fun/entertainment has many forms and variations. And *appreciating* something might actually be an existential experience: how do you *REALLY* know what the "purest form" of a game truly is unless you have played them all for yourself?
Also, shouldn't the "purest form" of a game be based on what YOU PERSONALLY value and love? The consensus of elite experts might be based upon criteria that you might not necessarily agree with. Also, what is a consensus? What is an expert? What is love? Why ask why?*
I agree that if a console port was FUNDAMENTALLY BROKEN, you** might not want to spend time playing it.
* Drink Bud Dry
* I would still play it, of course
Not simply because I am a masochist, but because playing video games is a fundamentally existential proposition. Yes, I went there. Yes, I take this too seriously. Yes, I was kind to you and didn't equate your "quest for purity" with a eugenicist's quest for purity. Don't worry, I have already equated the folks who want "absolutely pure video signals" with eugenicists. I am only half-joking when I say the desire for purity, in any form, comes from the same starting point...one of the key challenges in life, then, is how you handle this quest for purity in a fair, honest and moral manner. Oh, you thought I was joking when I said that playing video games was existential? No, I wasn't. Now stop bothering me so I can continue enjoying Metal Gear (NES).