

Depending on whether you have played the American version or not, however, you'll either love the soundtrack or hate it.

The CD-quality music is really crisp it's a mix of funky techno music that gets your heartbeat going fast. They make you feel like you're in the 90s again. The graphics are vivid and very colorful.

The other way is to collect all the Time Stones (which replace the Chaos Emeralds in this game) in the Special Stage. It's one of two ways to unlock the game's good ending. You can go into the future for fun, but you really want to go to the past so you can find the Roboticizer and destroy it, so that you can ensure a good future for the level. This game adds a twist: There are posts scattered around each level that take you to a past or future point in that level. The gameplay is what you'd expect from a Sonic game: you collect rings, jump on robots to destroy them, nab powerups, and race to the goal. In fact, it was the only game for that add-on to sell over 1,000,000 copies! Most Sonic fans say this was the greatest Sonic game ever made.īut enough babble, let's cut to the chase. That, of course meant more levels, crispier audio, and full-motion video! Sonic CD was a launch title for a short-lived add-on to the Genesis, called the SEGA-CD. This game stands out, however, as it wasn't on a cartridge like the other Sonic games, but on a full-fledged CD-ROM (hence the name " Sonic CD"). Surely you have heard of Sonic the Hedgehog? SEGA's answer to Super Mario was all the rage back in the early 90s, and his adventures on the 16-bit Genesis console are still considered to be some of the greatest games of all time.
