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#Namco museum 50th anniversary menu music mod
pac it would be faster/easier to get the Pacman cab and mod it ( either with a 60 in 1 ) or MAME ( IF you only wanted the 3 games you could add just the 30th anniversary rom and set it up to boot into the rom directly - IT's main screen provides the option of playing Galaga/Pacman or Ms pacman without needing a front end ) Or if you want officially licensed products using a PC system ( or PS2 or Xbox) there is Namco museum 50th anniversary edition game that has 16 or 17 games and launches to a selection screen with the cabs that you can move through and select a game and when you exit that game it goes back to the selection screen with the 16 games. ( Doesn't mean it can't be done but would require much more work and may not be worth the time/effort when there are still plenty of other games out there instead )
#Namco museum 50th anniversary menu music license
pac license from all 3 companies involved in it. pac is a hack of the original game and not a stand alone game so requires that license also ) and also an agreement to give the Ms. Pac more difficult and probably more expensive since you'd need the license for Pacman ( since ms. pac - only to get presented with a lawsuit from GCC ( the owners of the ms pac license) and Namco at first thought it was their product - Eventually the 3 companies came to some sort of agreement (terms were never released) that let Namco release the cab but since only those 3 companies know what the agreement was it makes getting licensing for Ms. They bought the rights to Crazy Otto and worked with GCC and Namco to prepare the game for release.Įxactly - and then as time passed Namco actually forgot that they had not designed the game and when the 30th Anniversary came around released a combination cab with Pacman/Galaga/Ms. Midway had become impatient in waiting for Namco to release its next Pac-Man game (which would be Super Pac-Man), and were enthusiastic that such a game had come to their attention. Rather than scrapping Crazy Otto entirely, the programmers chose to present the completed game to Midway, Namco's American distributor of Pac-Man. Part of the settlement terms barred GCC from selling future conversion kits without consent from the original game manufacturer. While Crazy Otto was under development, GCC settled a lawsuit with Atari over their Missile Command conversion kit Super Missile Attack. Pac-Man was originally conceived as an enhancement kit for Pac-Man called Crazy Otto, created by programmers employed at the General Computer Corporation (GCC).
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Pac-Man is owned by General Computer Corporation and Midway Manufacturing Pac-Man is more complex than for Pac-Man.