Contents[show] Units Mobile Suit Gundam Gundam Guncannon Guntank Ball GM Char's Zaku II Zaku II Gouf Dom Rick Dom Gyan Gelgoog Char's Gelgoog. Download SD Gundam G Generation 3D (3DS0394) ROM for 3DS completly free. All roms have multiple mirrors and work across all devices.
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A power needed for battle. People call this, 'Gundam'. A series of games developed by Tom Create based on the immensely popular franchise.
G Generation ( G Gen for short) has its roots in the myriad SRPG titles made for the in the early to mid-1990s. Most of these games played fast and loose with the rules, but G Gen marked the start of a more serious turn, bringing pilots into the equation and expanding the player's options vastly as time went on. The games follows a very traditional SRPG gameplay set in place by and, but mixed with its own squad system.
The squad system is based around a unit which leads a squadron of 4 mechs; so long as the other 3 mechs are within the squad leader's command aura (and starting from Zero) they can gang up on a target using support-attacks (so long as their weapons are within range of the target) and can in turn support-defend on the enemy's turn. Also added since Zero, pilots are given Bonus Steps when they successfully kill an enemy, allowing them additional turns. Although a unit can gain unlimited Bonus Steps in Zero and F, Neo limited the amount of potential turns by a character's level, increasing every 10 levels. As a result, battles are often based on careful positioning to take advantage of bonus steps via exploiting the 4-mech support attacks to guarantee a kill for each squad member. Other mechanics include 'evolving' mechs from one unit to their next successor (example: GM - GM-II - GM-III, Shining Gundam - God Gundam, etc). Depending on the game, some mechs have very long and complicated evolution trees, and one can 'evolve' a lowly all the way up to a, representing nearly 75 years worth of in-universe development. In general, G Gen games fall into one of two categories:.
Historical games focus on re-creating the events of the Gundam animations, with the player controlling the heroes as well as a group of characters, and usually rewarding faithfulness to the source material with bonus or CG movies of the event in question. The Historical games tend to be released on consoles and focus on more realistic battles. Crossover games put all the characters together into a common setting and unites them against an overarching threat, sometimes an villain and sometimes an established Gundam villain who lives longer and gets better toys than his animated counterpart. Crossover games tend to be released on handheld systems and feature squad-based battles, 'magic' (in the form of ID Commands), and special attacks. The G Gen F/mostly historic or non-merging series includes:. SD Gundam G Generation (1998, ): The first full-fledged game in the series, covering the events from through, with MS and characters from later series showing up as extras.
SD Gundam G Generation Zero (1999, ): Covers all the Universal Century anime, with one bonus stage each for, and, plus extra MS and characters from those universes. SD Gundam G Generation-F (2000, ): Covers all the anime up through, with many sidestories like, and; gets a single bonus stage, plus extra characters and MS. In 2001, an expansion disc G Generation-F.I.F. Was released, which included bonus scenarios and the ability to edit your team at will. SD Gundam G Generation Neo (2002, ): The first 'combination' game, playing like a Historical game but using a Crossover plotline, which produced such popular CG event movies as versus the, or the squaring off against.
Includes the as bonus units. SD Gundam G Generation SEED (2004, ): The first Historical game to include the full storyline and the first to include. Notable for having two separate History modes — one devoted to the Universal Century and random bits and pieces and one solely devoted to Gundam SEED. Mobile Suit Gundam SEED Destiny: Generation of C.E. (2005, ): Not technically a G Gen game, as it uses full-sized MS and focuses exclusively on the Cosmic Era universe, but because it uses the same engine as Neo it's considered part of the series.
SD Gundam G Generation Portable (2006, ): Effectively a remake of F that eschews most of the manga and sidestory plotlines in favor of giving full scenarios to, and (though said sidestory characters and MS are still in as extras). SD Gundam G Generation Spirits (2007, ): Focuses exclusively on the Universal Century, but goes into greater detail, adding more recent stories like and Advance of Zeta. Includes a rather surprising crossover character as the. SD Gundam G Generation Wars (2009, and ): Uses the engine from Spirits, but restores the Alternate Universes, including everything up through the first season of (with some MS from the second season as extras). Crossovers are used but does not affect canonical plotlines. From this game to Overworld, the F/Historical series are no longer completely historical and come into play. SD Gundam G Generation Touch (2010, ): A gathering card-style social game.
SD Gundam G Generation World (2010, and ): An improved Wars-style 'combination' game, using the engine of Spirits/ Wars and an plotline (that unfolds in the form of several EX missions that end each rank, plus three final stages), as well as adding in Second Season, and as a bonus the 00 QanT from and pilots from (Yes, you can put a Gundam in your Gundam.). SD Gundam G Generation 3D (2011, ): A World-overhaul, introducing and to the series. SD Gundam G Generation Overworld (2012, ): Continues World's plotline through both another set of rank-ending EX missions and a five-mission 'World Core' campaign detailing a new original protagonist's behind-the-scenes exploits, both plots converging in the endgame. Including the most number of series to-date at the time, it brings back G-Unit and introduces the, along with Gundam Unicorn (up to Episode 5) and Gundam AGE (covering the end of the 1st generation arc, with Asemu and the Gundam AGE-2 from the beginning of the 2nd generation arc as a bonus). SD Gundam G Generation Frontier (2013, and Android): A Touch-overhaul, although the roster is based off of Overworld's.