Terminator 2: Judgment Day arcade 2 player 60fps

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Published 2018-10-27
Best viewed in 60 fps. I'm player 1 and Mark is player 2. Note that the number of bombs per continue was set at 99. I edited out one death each at the two parts in the game where you restart if you fail.

All Comments (21)
  • @bethamanda2277
    Some of my youngest memories are playing this at a arcade in golden ring mall with my dad. Sadly the mall and my dad are no more but I will always have the memories. Thank you for posting this
  • @TeamVVV
    If you haven't played the arcade game, seeing like this really doesn't do it justice. The Uzi's violently vibrating combined with the intensity of the cab made you feel completely involved.
  • @blokin5039
    This game looked insanely good for it's time.
  • Man! I remember being so damn good at this game i could beat it on one quarter. - Said no one ever.
  • @d00ks
    The frustration of trying to pass the 3rd stage without accidentally blowing up the truck defined my childhood rage
  • @EonFigure
    Watching this made me remember the scent of popcorn and the game itself being 10x louder than what i'm actually listening it to. 90's Movie-theater/gaming arcades man...those were the days.
  • @hanssundin9793
    Remember played this game in the arcade’s and came home start crying seeing my 8-bits nes again lol
  • @merciless41582
    This game turned 30 years old this year. Unbelievable how time flies. This is by far the best mounted gun arcade of all time. Given how big the movie was back then and this arcade game just added to it. The console version don't come close to the arcade version at all. I fed this arcade game a lot of my money. Revolution X, Terminator 2 Judgement Day, Lethal Enforcers 1 and 2, Time Crisis I and II, Space Gun, Alien 3 The Gun, Crime Patrol, Area 51, Maximum Force, Mad Dog McGree, Steel Gunner, so many great legendary gun arcade games from the 90s. I'm going to hook up the MAME later and play this classic.
  • @eloratings
    I remember playing this game in early 1990s era. 1992-1993 were the golden years of arcade machine.
  • Thank you for posting this. Brings back great memories from my brother's birthday party when I was a kid. No telling how many quarters we spent trying to get past that damned truck stage. Never could pull it off.
  • @amsterdamG2G
    Did not expect it but it made me kind of emotional. Thinking about the good old days of childhood.
  • @Babuiski
    I played this game to death as a kid and poured countless quarters into it. A lot of video games based on movies suck but this game was a manual on how to do it right. It expanded the universe giving us more future war lore. And it built on the present day sequences. God I loved this game.
  • @RisingBeast00
    I remember spending a lot of quarters on this game and I couldn't even pass the first screen.
  • @ITRIEDEL
    When gamers say “I remember when games weren’t pay to win” clearly never played these types of games lol
  • You guys are badass keeping everyone alive in the beginning. When I was a kid I would get so bummed out because I couldn't save them. Haha
  • @officegossip
    You had to be there to see how awesome this machine was. Two big ass machine guns and a big CRT monitor tucked all the way inside a dark cabinet. The game reeked atmosphere just from the construction of the cabinet alone.
  • @mksolid82
    I remember when this arcade machine was everywhere when I was a kid. Those heavy duty guns were not easy to handle. Such great memories of the old arcade days.
  • @bmshaven
    What an experience as a kid to be able to walk into an arcade and practically be guaranteed an awesome gameplay experience and amazing graphics. It seems the 'A' teams were always programming the arcade games back then. It's crazy to be given this experience of T2, with it's spot on likeness in many areas, and then play half-baked film-based games on 8 bit and 16 bit consoles...sometimes with very little to do with the movies they were based on. It was like night and day. However, this difference in quality only helped give the arcade a godlike level of gaming status at the time.