Powerslave Iso Saturn
All Consoles. 3DO. Atari 2600.
Atari 5200. Atari 7800.
Atari Jaguar. Atari Lynx.
Played the crap out of this on my saturn when it was first released and remember seeing a review of the PSX version in CVG which got 4 out of 5 (The saturn version.
Psychic Killer Taromaru Iso Saturn
Coleco Colecovision. Dreamcast.
Game Gear. Gameboy / Color.
Gameboy Advance. GameCube. GCE Vectrex.
MAME. Mattel Intellivision.
Memotech MTX512. MGT Sam Coupe.
MSX1. MSX2. Neo Geo. Neo Geo CD. Neo Geo Pocket. Nintendo.
Nintendo 64. Nintendo DS. PC-Engine.
PlayStation. PlayStation 2.
PSP. Sega CD. Sega Genesis. Sega Master System. Sega Saturn. Super Nintendo. TurboGrafx-16.
WonderSwan / Color Search.
Join the Gggmanlives Steam Group: Download the game here: PowerSlave, known as Exhumed in PAL territories and A.D. 1999: Pharaoh's Revival (西暦1999 ファラオの復活?) in Japan, is a first-person shooter developed by Lobotomy Software and published by Playmates Interactive Entertainment. It was released in the U.S, Japan, and Europe for the Sega Saturn, Sony PlayStation, and DOS over the course of a year from late 1996 to late 1997. An unofficial port from the PS1 version was released by Samuel 'Kaiser' Villarreal.
PowerSlave is set in an area around the ancient Egyptian city of Karnak in the late 20th century. The city has been seized by unknown forces, with a special crack team of hardened soldiers sent to the valley of Karnak, to uncover the source of this trouble. However, on the journey there, the player's helicopter is shot down and the player barely escapes. The player is sent in to the valley as the hero to save Karnak and the World.
The player finds himself battling hordes of evil creatures known as the Kilmaat, including mummies, Anubis soldiers, scorpions and evil spirits. The player's course of action is directed by the spirit of King Ramses, whose mummy was exhumed from its tomb by these evil creatures to drain it of its power, and use it to control the world.
In the console versions, there are two endings, depending on the player's course of action during the game. In the first, good ending, the protagonist has collected eight pieces of a radio transmission device, so he can send a rescue signal and be extracted from the Valley. After reclaiming the mummy of Ramses, the Pharaoh thanks him for his effort, and promises the player that he will inheret Ramses' Earthly kingdom, and that the Gods will bless him with eternal life and make him ruler of the world. After escaping the collapsing tomb, the player is indeed rewarded as such, and becomes a powerful and benevolent Pharaoh of the entire planet. In the second, bad ending, the player has failed to collect all eight pieces of the radio transmitter, and is subsequently buried in the tomb of Ramses, only to be excavated centuries later by the now ruling forces of the Kilmaat.
In the PC version, there are two slightly different endings, again depending on the player's course of action, but only in the final stage. The final stage takes place aboard the Kilmaat mothership, where a nuclear weapon has been armed and is set to go off in 15 minutes, and has enough power to obliterate the planet.
In the bad ending, which occurs if the player loses all of their lives or fails to disarm the bomb in time, Earth is destroyed in a massive nuclear blast. In the good ending, which occurs if the player makes it to the bomb on time, the Kilmaat retreat from the planet, but unfortunately for the main character, he's stuck on their ship and needs to find a way off.