Zool: Game rip
Game info
Name: Zool
Alternate name: Zool: Ninja of the 'Nth' Dimension; Zool no Yume Bouken (Japan)
Characteristics: Action, Platform, Side-Scrolling, Arcade
Publishers: Electronic Arts, GameTek, Gremlin, Gremlin Graphics, Gremlin Interactive, Infocom (JP)
Developers: Gremlin, Gremlin Graphics, Gremlin Interactive
Original/port composer: Patrick Phelan (Amiga)
Platforms:
Sega Master System
Amiga CD32 - United States
Game Boy - United States
Super NES - United States
Atari ST (1992) - Europe
Amiga (1992) - Europe
Sega Mega Drive (1992)
Arcade (1993)
Game Boy (1993)
PC Dos (1993) - Europe
Sega GameGear (29 Jul 1994) - Japan
Super NES (29 Jul 1994) - Japan
Music info
Released: 1992
Related Plaform: Amiga
Format: Tracked music (MOD / XM / S3M / IT)
Composer of these tunes: Patrick Phelan
Source / Archiver / Ripper: Mirsoft, UnExoticA
Music type: Game rip
Archived process: Archived (different version on UnExoticA)
Num of tunes (original): 9
Complete (original): 100%
Num of tunes (actual): 7
Complete (actual): 78%
Size of archive (original): 486 KBytes
Size of archive (actual): 383 KBytes
User reviews
- "zool game rip" (by jb, 24 Jun 2004) [5/10]
Fun for kids. Different versions of the same song. Happy and weeee!
- "crazy" (by yates, 11 Aug 2004) [7/10]
some crazy and weird tunes in there but my favourite has to be rock n zool :)
- "Ninja Zool" (by Revenue, 28 Mar 2005) [7/10]
The ninja Zool sure was a joy to control,spinning moves in some nice designed levels,the music is nice,if you have played Lotus 3 you will notice that Gremlin has remixed some tunes from Lotus 3 in Zool,it is a nice soundtrack,with some hard beats.
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Facts / description
More info here:
http://www.exotica.org.uk/tunes/unexotica/games/Zool.html
Music download
Download Game Music in ZIP archive! (7 tunes actually in this archive)
Download Game music from UnExoticA! (9 tunes)
Other music records from this game
Other tools
Generate info.txt - with this cool feature you can generate the info.txt file with all tune information and save it somewhere, which means you'll have something like "tune ID card"! :) This has cool advantages - it's small, fastly readable/editable, you can add it to the tune archive if you want and you will have everytime fast information about the game and music archive. Also programs which support reading from txt files (such as KBMedia Player) can read the info.txt file directly while playing tunes of all formats!
Help - description of Music record fields