Eternal Flame: The undying light of the soul that burns forever.
In the vast expanse of the cosmos, we sometimes lose sight of our true selves. Yet, within you dwells an "inner flame" that can never be extinguished. This video depicts the alignment of stars, the intersection of souls, and the profound bonds that transcend time and space, all woven into a spiritual melody.
"The words remain, a burning fire. Across the stars, beyond all bars."
This message serves as a reminder of your infinite potential and your harmony with the universe. In the stillness of the night, or when you wish to reconnect with your essence, allow yourself to surrender to these vibrations. It is my hope that your soul finds its way back to its original brilliance through this experience.
If this video resonated with your heart, please subscribe and give a thumbs up to share your "light" with our community.
On the vast stage known as the universe, our souls continue an eternal journey. This video, "Eternal Stage," was created to awaken the inherent brilliance of your soul through a sacred symphony of light and sound.
In the drama of life, we sometimes shed tears and sometimes tremble with joy. However, every moment is a precious fragment that colors your inner universe, like jewels scattered across the night sky. There is no need to be misled by passing scenery or emotions. They are all processes leading you toward deeper love and harmony.
Even at this very moment, your soul is free and possesses infinite potential. Surrender yourself to the vibrations flowing from this video and feel the "true light" dormant within your heart. Love yourself, resonate with others, and become one with the universe. When you do, the stage of your life will begin to radiate an eternal glow.
It is my hope that this music and imagery will serve as a healing balm for your soul and a key to opening the door to the next dimension.
This video, which depicts the moment when the shadows of the past fade away and the pure radiance of the soul is unleashed, is filled with the energy to help you transform into a new you. An unknown world stretches beyond the horizon, where infinite possibility and harmony await.
The clear blue sky and shining structures depicted in the video symbolize the process of us ascending beyond existing frameworks. When we shed our old selves and limitations and open our hearts, perfect harmony with the universe is born.
Every end is the beginning of a new, vivid dream. The door before you is now open. Surrender to this vibration and go meet the brilliance of yourself that you have yet to see. The courage to take a step forward will lead your soul to a higher dimension.
Soul Keywords: Soul liberation, horizon, self-transcendence, cosmic harmony, raising vibration, infinite possibilities, new beginnings, spiritual growth, journey into the unknown, guiding light
Are you ready to surrender to the flow of life and unleash your inner light?
This video was created with positive energy to help you rediscover your innate "soul brilliance" and live as a beacon of hope that shines through the darkness. This beautiful melody weaves a message to transform even the rough waves of life into blessings and connect with your higher self.
A grateful heart is a "guiding star" that illuminates your path. When you let go of attachments to the past and embrace the miracles of this present moment, your life will begin to shine more brightly than ever before. Evolve calmly and passionately into the best version of yourself.
May the light within you illuminate the world.
To all viewers:
Thank you for watching this video until the end. If you resonated with this message, please give it a "like" and "subscribe." I'd love it if you'd share your spiritual realizations in the comments section.
But to the misfortune of the Blue spy, the place where they ended up is too small to escape, and Hawk captures him back for debriefing.
The Spy provided a lot of information about the plans of Plastro and the Tan army, about the discovery of the "Portals" and the weapons that Plastro can get from there. Also the whereabouts of the Heroes.
Having rescued Hoover, Riff, Thick, and Shrap, Sarge is informed by Colonel Grimm that Plastro has sent an ultimatum to the Green nation: "Surrender or be destroyed." The Greens' only option is for Hawk to destroy the last remaining portal in the most heavily guarded corner of Fort Plastro. Hawk eventually manages to use the portal after fighting his way through in an epic one-man battle. After believing Vikki had betrayed the Green army, Hawk rescues Scorch and is told that she stayed with Plastro to try to gain his trust and gain information, so the two of them deliver that valuable strategic information to the Green army.
Returning to Fort Plastro again, this time Sarge attacks from the east side of the base, managing to take it with the help of the Green army for the finale.
After this, Vikki is discovered and Plastro sends a bomb through the portal, destroying the Greens' ability to pursue him, with Hawk being the only one who manages to pass through the portal by using it to escape. He fell into a giant sandbox, watching in the distance as Vikki calls for help while she is kidnapped by Plastro.
Finally Hawk manages to overcome the sandbox and uses a rocket to go to the coordinates where they took Vikki, and after rescuing her they both must escape from a gigantic monster, separating again. But after crossing the entire Christmas living room, Sarge is about to meet Vikki again and reach the portal that will take him home.
FMV Mod for Army Men: Sarge's Heroes in Sega Dreamcast, adding the video cutscenes.
Sarge Hawk and Colonel Grimm narrowly escaped by helicopter from the Tan attack on their Green base, but on the way they spot a Blue tank in the middle of the nearest town, which is very suspicious given the circumstances, and Hawk He decides to go and investigate. Trying to follow the Spy, Sarge enters some kind of strange, illuminated cave or hole, which leads him to what appears to be another world totally different from his own: a vast and gigantic world. But to the misfortune of the Blue spy, the place where they ended up is too small to escape, and Hawk captures him back for debriefing.
The Spy provided a lot of information about the plans of Plastro and the Tan army, about the discovery of the "Portals" and the weapons that Plastro can get from there. Also the whereabouts of the Heroes.
Having rescued Hoover, Riff, Thick, and Shrap, Sarge is informed by Colonel Grimm that Plastro has sent an ultimatum to the Green nation: "Surrender or be destroyed." The Greens' only option is for Hawk to destroy the last remaining portal in the most heavily guarded corner of Fort Plastro. Hawk eventually manages to use the portal after fighting his way through in an epic one-man battle. After believing Vikki had betrayed the Green army, Hawk rescues Scorch and is told that she stayed with Plastro to try to gain his trust and gain information, so the two of them deliver that valuable strategic information to the Green army.
Returning to Fort Plastro again, this time Sarge attacks from the east side of the base, managing to take it with the help of the Green army for the finale.
After this, Vikki is discovered and Plastro sends a bomb through the portal, destroying the Greens' ability to pursue him, with Hawk being the only one who manages to pass through the portal by using it to escape. He fell into a giant sandbox, watching in the distance as Vikki calls for help while she is kidnapped by Plastro.
Finally Hawk manages to overcome the sandbox and uses a rocket to go to the coordinates where they took Vikki, and after rescuing her they both must escape from a gigantic monster, separating again.
FMV Mod for Army Men: Sarge's Heroes in Sega Dreamcast, adding the video cutscenes.
Sarge's Heroes is a third-person shooting video game developed and published by The 3DO Company for Nintendo 64 in North America on September 28, 1999 and April 14, 2000 in Europe. The player normally controls Sarge Hawk, a sergeant of the Green Army and fights against the evil General Plastro and the Tan Army. The story is the eternal racial war between the Greens and the Tas. This is 3DO's grand attempt to incorporate a recognizable brand into the Army Men franchise. Establish a main cast, updating the generic "Sarge" from the original series to a strongman Sarge Hawk, giving him a squad, a girlfriend and an officer at the helm. It is a very successful launch, despite the fact that Jim Cummings only gives the voice to each male character, resulting quite convincing. This game helped to bring the franchise further to the subseries Sarge's Heroes. Both armies are named after the usual colors of plastic toy army men.
The campaign of a player is the main mode of Sarge's Heroes. The player travels through various missions, completing objectives.
Exclusive to the PS1 version of the game are the fully animated prerendered scenes, which the Nintendo 64 lacks, thanks to the limited space in the cartridges. Even the Dreamcast version, which is nothing more than an improved copy of the N64, stuck to the pantomime narration in the engine instead of the CGI-animated FMV films.
On N64 you don't have to deal with the clumsy physics and poor collision detection of PS1, even though N64 it's not perfect, it's just much better. DC is not much different to N64, but something worse. It's positive that the lack of verticality of PS1 and PC is not present in N64 and DC, because it adds a whole new dimension to the missions. The N64 version was not optimal in terms of its controls, but it was not as bad as Playstation 1 and PC.
Even though the Army Men games had already established a formula for their third-person shooting games with Army Men 3D, Sarge's Heroes deviates a lot, completely overhauling almost every aspect. The camera perspective, the detail, the movement, the animation; everything has been changed to allow for a faster and less deliberate pace. Sarge Hawk can also jump, which allows for a little climbing on platforms. Pero lo worst is the time it takes the camera that follows the player to adjust itself again, so that the view that we have ahead is not so disconcertingly vacillating.
The Dreamcast version is the same than N64, only with better graphics, textures, character design and voice acting included, which is why Dreamcast is probably the best version (except that the FMV is missing here too).
#ArmyMenSargesHeroes #ArmyMen #Dreamcast #SargesHeroes #SegaDreamcast
Sarge Hawk and Colonel Grimm narrowly escaped by helicopter from the Tan attack on their Green base, but on the way they spot a Blue tank in the middle of the nearest town, which is very suspicious given the circumstances, and Hawk He decides to go and investigate. Trying to follow the Spy, Sarge enters some kind of strange, illuminated cave or hole, which leads him to what appears to be another world totally different from his own: a vast and gigantic world. But to the misfortune of the Blue spy, the place where they ended up is too small to escape, and Hawk captures him back for debriefing.
The Spy provided a lot of information about the plans of Plastro and the Tan army, about the discovery of the "Portals" and the weapons that Plastro can get from there. Also the whereabouts of the Heroes.
Having rescued Hoover, Riff, Thick, and Shrap, Sarge is informed by Colonel Grimm that Plastro has sent an ultimatum to the Green nation: "Surrender or be destroyed." The Greens' only option is for Hawk to destroy the last remaining portal in the most heavily guarded corner of Fort Plastro. Hawk eventually manages to use the portal after fighting his way through in an epic one-man battle. After believing Vikki had betrayed the Green army, Hawk rescues Scorch and is told that she stayed with Plastro to try to gain his trust and gain information, so the two of them deliver that valuable strategic information to the Green army.
Returning to Fort Plastro again, this time Sarge attacks from the east side of the base, managing to take it with the help of the Green army for the finale.
After this, Vikki is discovered and Plastro sends a bomb through the portal, destroying the Greens' ability to pursue him, with Hawk being the only one who manages to pass through the portal by using it to escape. He fell into a giant sandbox, watching in the distance as Vikki calls for help while she is kidnapped by Plastro.
Finally Hawk manages to overcome the sandbox and uses a rocket to go to the coordinates where they took Vikki, and after rescuing her they both must escape from a gigantic monster, separating again.
FMV Mod for Army Men: Sarge's Heroes in Sega Dreamcast, adding the video cutscenes.
Sarge's Heroes is a third-person shooting video game developed and published by The 3DO Company for Nintendo 64 in North America on September 28, 1999 and April 14, 2000 in Europe. The player normally controls Sarge Hawk, a sergeant of the Green Army and fights against the evil General Plastro and the Tan Army. The story is the eternal racial war between the Greens and the Tas. This is 3DO's grand attempt to incorporate a recognizable brand into the Army Men franchise. Establish a main cast, updating the generic "Sarge" from the original series to a strongman Sarge Hawk, giving him a squad, a girlfriend and an officer at the helm. It is a very successful launch, despite the fact that Jim Cummings only gives the voice to each male character, resulting quite convincing. This game helped to bring the franchise further to the subseries Sarge's Heroes. Both armies are named after the usual colors of plastic toy army men.
The campaign of a player is the main mode of Sarge's Heroes. The player travels through various missions, completing objectives.
Exclusive to the PS1 version of the game are the fully animated prerendered scenes, which the Nintendo 64 lacks, thanks to the limited space in the cartridges. Even the Dreamcast version, which is nothing more than an improved copy of the N64, stuck to the pantomime narration in the engine instead of the CGI-animated FMV films.
On N64 you don't have to deal with the clumsy physics and poor collision detection of PS1, even though N64 it's not perfect, it's just much better. DC is not much different to N64, but something worse. It's positive that the lack of verticality of PS1 and PC is not present in N64 and DC, because it adds a whole new dimension to the missions. The N64 version was not optimal in terms of its controls, but it was not as bad as Playstation 1 and PC.
Even though the Army Men games had already established a formula for their third-person shooting games with Army Men 3D, Sarge's Heroes deviates a lot, completely overhauling almost every aspect. The camera perspective, the detail, the movement, the animation; everything has been changed to allow for a faster and less deliberate pace. Sarge Hawk can also jump, which allows for a little climbing on platforms. Pero lo worst is the time it takes the camera that follows the player to adjust itself again, so that the view that we have ahead is not so disconcertingly vacillating.
The Dreamcast version is the same than N64, only with better graphics, textures, character design and voice acting included, which is why Dreamcast is probably the best version (except that the FMV is missing here too).
#ArmyMenSargesHeroes #ArmyMen #Dreamcast #SargesHeroes #SegaDreamcast
Sarge Hawk and Colonel Grimm narrowly escaped by helicopter from the Tan attack on their Green base, but on the way they spot a Blue tank in the middle of the nearest town, which is very suspicious given the circumstances, and Hawk He decides to go and investigate. Trying to follow the Spy, Sarge enters some kind of strange, illuminated cave or hole, which leads him to what appears to be another world totally different from his own: a vast and gigantic world. But to the misfortune of the Blue spy, the place where they ended up is too small to escape, and Hawk captures him back for debriefing.
The Spy provided a lot of information about the plans of Plastro and the Tan army, about the discovery of the "Portals" and the weapons that Plastro can get from there. Also the whereabouts of the Heroes.
Having rescued Hoover, Riff, Thick, and Shrap, Sarge is informed by Colonel Grimm that Plastro has sent an ultimatum to the Green nation: "Surrender or be destroyed." The Greens' only option is for Hawk to destroy the last remaining portal in the most heavily guarded corner of Fort Plastro. Hawk eventually manages to use the portal after fighting his way through in an epic one-man battle. After believing Vikki had betrayed the Green army, Hawk rescues Scorch and is told that she stayed with Plastro to try to gain his trust and gain information, so the two of them deliver that valuable strategic information to the Green army.
Returning to Fort Plastro again, this time Sarge attacks from the east side of the base, managing to take it with the help of the Green army for the finale.
After this, Vikki is discovered and Plastro sends a bomb through the portal, destroying the Greens' ability to pursue him, with Hawk being the only one who manages to pass through the portal by using it to escape. He fell into a giant sandbox, watching in the distance as Vikki calls for help while she is kidnapped by Plastro.
Finally Hawk manages to overcome the sandpit and uses a rocket to go to the coordinates where Vikki was taken....
FMV Mod for Army Men: Sarge's Heroes in Sega Dreamcast, adding the video cutscenes.
Sarge's Heroes is a third-person shooting video game developed and published by The 3DO Company for Nintendo 64 in North America on September 28, 1999 and April 14, 2000 in Europe. The player normally controls Sarge Hawk, a sergeant of the Green Army and fights against the evil General Plastro and the Tan Army. The story is the eternal racial war between the Greens and the Tas. This is 3DO's grand attempt to incorporate a recognizable brand into the Army Men franchise. Establish a main cast, updating the generic "Sarge" from the original series to a strongman Sarge Hawk, giving him a squad, a girlfriend and an officer at the helm. It is a very successful launch, despite the fact that Jim Cummings only gives the voice to each male character, resulting quite convincing. This game helped to bring the franchise further to the subseries Sarge's Heroes. Both armies are named after the usual colors of plastic toy army men.
The campaign of a player is the main mode of Sarge's Heroes. The player travels through various missions, completing objectives.
Exclusive to the PS1 version of the game are the fully animated prerendered scenes, which the Nintendo 64 lacks, thanks to the limited space in the cartridges. Even the Dreamcast version, which is nothing more than an improved copy of the N64, stuck to the pantomime narration in the engine instead of the CGI-animated FMV films.
On N64 you don't have to deal with the clumsy physics and poor collision detection of PS1, even though N64 it's not perfect, it's just much better. DC is not much different to N64, but something worse. It's positive that the lack of verticality of PS1 and PC is not present in N64 and DC, because it adds a whole new dimension to the missions. The N64 version was not optimal in terms of its controls, but it was not as bad as Playstation 1 and PC.
Even though the Army Men games had already established a formula for their third-person shooting games with Army Men 3D, Sarge's Heroes deviates a lot, completely overhauling almost every aspect. The camera perspective, the detail, the movement, the animation; everything has been changed to allow for a faster and less deliberate pace. Sarge Hawk can also jump, which allows for a little climbing on platforms. Pero lo worst is the time it takes the camera that follows the player to adjust itself again, so that the view that we have ahead is not so disconcertingly vacillating.
The worse: the Dreamcast version has a total absence of pilotable vehicles. Only the Playstation and PC version has some tanks.
The Dreamcast version is the same than N64, only with better graphics, textures, character design and voice acting included, which is why Dreamcast is probably the best version (except that the FMV is missing here too).
#ArmyMenSargesHeroes #ArmyMen #Dreamcast #SargesHeroes #SegaDreamcast
Sarge Hawk and Colonel Grimm narrowly escaped by helicopter from the Tan attack on their Green base, but on the way they spot a Blue tank in the middle of the nearest town, which is very suspicious given the circumstances, and Hawk He decides to go and investigate. Trying to follow the Spy, Sarge enters some kind of strange, illuminated cave or hole, which leads him to what appears to be another world totally different from his own: a vast and gigantic world. But to the misfortune of the Blue spy, the place where they ended up is too small to escape, and Hawk captures him back for debriefing.
The Spy provided a lot of information about the plans of Plastro and the Tan army, about the discovery of the "Portals" and the weapons that Plastro can get from there. Also the whereabouts of the Heroes.
Having rescued Hoover, Riff, Thick, and Shrap, Sarge is informed by Colonel Grimm that Plastro has sent an ultimatum to the Green nation: "Surrender or be destroyed." The Greens' only option is f
Sarge Hawk and Colonel Grimm narrowly escaped by helicopter from the Tan attack on their Green base, but on the way they spot a Blue tank in the middle of the nearest town, which is very suspicious given the circumstances, and Hawk He decides to go and investigate. Trying to follow the Spy, Sarge enters some kind of strange, illuminated cave or hole, which leads him to what appears to be another world totally different from his own: a vast and gigantic world. But to the misfortune of the Blue spy, the place where they ended up is too small to escape, and Hawk captures him back for debriefing.
The Spy provided a lot of information about the plans of Plastro and the Tan army, about the discovery of the "Portals" and the weapons that Plastro can get from there. Also the whereabouts of the Heroes.
Having rescued Hoover, Riff, Thick, and Shrap, Sarge is informed by Colonel Grimm that Plastro has sent an ultimatum to the Green nation: "Surrender or be destroyed." The Greens' only option is for Hawk to destroy the last remaining portal in the most heavily guarded corner of Fort Plastro. Hawk eventually manages to use the portal after fighting his way through in an epic one-man battle. After believing Vikki had betrayed the Green army, Hawk rescues Scorch and is told that she stayed with Plastro to try to gain his trust and gain information, so the two of them deliver that valuable strategic information to the Green army.
Returning to Fort Plastro again, this time Sarge attacks from the east side of the base, managing to take it with the help of the Green army for the finale.
After this, Vikki is discovered and Plastro sends a bomb through the portal, destroying the Greens' ability to pursue him, with Hawk being the only one who manages to pass through the portal by using it to escape.
FMV Mod for Army Men: Sarge's Heroes in Sega Dreamcast, adding the video cutscenes.
Sarge's Heroes is a third-person shooting video game developed and published by The 3DO Company for Nintendo 64 in North America on September 28, 1999 and April 14, 2000 in Europe. The player normally controls Sarge Hawk, a sergeant of the Green Army and fights against the evil General Plastro and the Tan Army. The story is the eternal racial war between the Greens and the Tas. This is 3DO's grand attempt to incorporate a recognizable brand into the Army Men franchise. Establish a main cast, updating the generic "Sarge" from the original series to a strongman Sarge Hawk, giving him a squad, a girlfriend and an officer at the helm. It is a very successful launch, despite the fact that Jim Cummings only gives the voice to each male character, resulting quite convincing. This game helped to bring the franchise further to the subseries Sarge's Heroes. Both armies are named after the usual colors of plastic toy army men.
There are two player modes: Campaign and BootCamp, in addition to the Multiplayer mode. In multiplayer mode from 2 to 4 players, players choose their character, faction (color) and difficulty.
The campaign of a player is the main mode of Sarge's Heroes. The player travels through various missions, completing objectives, killing enemies, destroying vehicles and rescuing plastic allies.
Exclusive to the PS1 version of the game are the fully animated prerendered scenes, which the Nintendo 64 lacks, thanks to the limited space in the cartridges. Even the Dreamcast version, which is nothing more than an improved copy of the N64, stuck to the pantomime narration in the engine instead of the CGI-animated FMV films.
On N64 you don't have to deal with the clumsy physics and poor collision detection of PS1, even though N64 it's not perfect, it's just much better. DC is not much different to N64, but something worse. It's positive that the lack of verticality of PS1 and PC is not present in N64 and DC, because it adds a whole new dimension to the missions. The N64 version was not optimal in terms of its controls, but it was not as bad as Playstation 1 and PC.
Even though the Army Men games had already established a formula for their third-person shooting games with Army Men 3D, Sarge's Heroes deviates a lot, completely overhauling almost every aspect. The camera perspective, the detail, the movement, the animation; everything has been changed to allow for a faster and less deliberate pace. Sarge Hawk can also jump, which allows for a little climbing on platforms. Pero lo worst is the time it takes the camera that follows the player to adjust itself again, so that the view that we have ahead is not so disconcertingly vacillating.
The worse: the Dreamcast version has a total absence of pilotable vehicles. Only the Playstation and PC version has some tanks.
The Dreamcast version is the same than N64, only with better graphics, textures, character design and voice acting included, which is why Dreamcast is probably the best version (except that the FMV is missing here too).
#ArmyMenSargesHeroes #ArmyMen #Dreamcast #SargesHeroes #SegaDreamcast
Sarge Hawk and Colonel Grimm narrowly escape a Tan attack on their Green base by helicopter. On their way, they spot a suspicious Blue tank in a nearby town, prompting Hawk to investigate. Hawk follows a Blue Spy into an illuminated cave, leading to a vast, gigantic world. The trapped Spy is captured, revealing crucial details about Plastro’s plans, the Portals, weapons, and the Heroes’ whereabouts.
After rescuing Hoover, Riff, Thick, and Shrap, Grimm informs Hawk of Plastro's ultimatum: "Surrender or be destroyed." Hawk must destroy the final portal, located in Fort Plastro's most guarded corner. Following a challenging solo battle, Hawk succeeds and learns that Vikki stayed with Plastro to gain trust and gather information. Teaming up with Scorch, they deliver this intel to the Green army. Returning to Fort Plastro, Hawk launches an attack on the base’s eastern side, advancing his mission to protect the Green Nation.
Sarge Hawk and Colonel Grimm narrowly escape a Tan attack on their Green base by helicopter. On their way, they spot a suspicious Blue tank in a nearby town, prompting Hawk to investigate. Hawk follows a Blue Spy into an illuminated cave, leading to a vast, gigantic world. The trapped Spy is captured, revealing crucial details about Plastro’s plans, the Portals, weapons, and the Heroes’ whereabouts.
After rescuing Hoover, Riff, Thick, and Shrap, Grimm informs Hawk of Plastro's ultimatum: "Surrender or be destroyed." Hawk must destroy the final portal, located in Fort Plastro's most guarded corner. Following a challenging solo battle, Hawk succeeds and learns that Vikki stayed with Plastro to gain trust and gather information. Teaming up with Scorch, they deliver this intel to the Green army. Returning to Fort Plastro, Hawk launches an attack on the base’s eastern side, advancing his mission to protect the Green Nation.
Sarge Hawk and Colonel Grimm narrowly escaped by helicopter from the Tan attack on their Green base, but on the way they spot a Blue tank in the middle of the nearest town, which is very suspicious given the circumstances, and Hawk He decides to go and investigate. Trying to follow the Spy, Sarge enters some kind of strange, illuminated cave or hole, which leads him to what appears to be another world totally different from his own: a vast and gigantic world. But to the misfortune of the Blue spy, the place where they ended up is too small to escape, and Hawk captures him back for debriefing.
The Spy provided a lot of information about the plans of Plastro and the Tan army, about the discovery of the "Portals" and the weapons that Plastro can get from there. Also the whereabouts of the Heroes.
Having rescued Hoover, Riff, Thick, and Shrap, Sarge is informed by Colonel Grimm that Plastro sent an ultimatum to the Green nation: "Surrender or be destroyed." The only option for the Greens is for Hawk to destroy the last remaining portal in the most guarded corner of Fort Plastro. Hawk finally manages to use the portal after fighting his way through an epic one man battle...
FMV Mod for Army Men: Sarge's Heroes in Sega Dreamcast, adding the video cutscenes.
Sarge's Heroes is a third-person shooting video game developed and published by The 3DO Company for Nintendo 64 in North America on September 28, 1999 and April 14, 2000 in Europe. The player normally controls Sarge Hawk, a sergeant of the Green Army and fights against the evil General Plastro and the Tan Army. The story is the eternal racial war between the Greens and the Tas. This is 3DO's grand attempt to incorporate a recognizable brand into the Army Men franchise. Establish a main cast, updating the generic "Sarge" from the original series to a strongman Sarge Hawk, giving him a squad, a girlfriend and an officer at the helm. It is a very successful launch, despite the fact that Jim Cummings only gives the voice to each male character, resulting quite convincing. This game helped to bring the franchise further to the subseries Sarge's Heroes. Both armies are named after the usual colors of plastic toy army men.
There are two player modes: Campaign and BootCamp, in addition to the Multiplayer mode. In multiplayer mode from 2 to 4 players, players choose their character, faction (color) and difficulty.
The campaign of a player is the main mode of Sarge's Heroes. The player travels through various missions, completing objectives, killing enemies, destroying vehicles and rescuing plastic allies.
The BootCamp is a training level where the player learns the controls. It consists of training areas for all weapons, an obstacle course and a "real fire track".
Exclusive to the PS1 version of the game are the fully animated prerendered scenes, which the Nintendo 64 lacks, thanks to the limited space in the cartridges. Even the Dreamcast version, which is nothing more than an improved copy of the N64, stuck to the pantomime narration in the engine instead of the CGI-animated FMV films.
On N64 you don't have to deal with the clumsy physics and poor collision detection of PS1, even though N64 it's not perfect, it's just much better. DC is not much different to N64, but something worse. It's positive that the lack of verticality of PS1 and PC is not present in N64 and DC, because it adds a whole new dimension to the missions. The N64 version was not optimal in terms of its controls, but it was not as bad as Playstation 1 and PC.
Even though the Army Men games had already established a formula for their third-person shooting games with Army Men 3D, Sarge's Heroes deviates a lot, completely overhauling almost every aspect. The camera perspective, the detail, the movement, the animation; everything has been changed to allow for a faster and less deliberate pace. Sarge Hawk can also jump, which allows for a little climbing on platforms. Pero lo worst is the time it takes the camera that follows the player to adjust itself again, so that the view that we have ahead is not so disconcertingly vacillating.
The worse: the Dreamcast version has a total absence of pilotable vehicles. Only the Playstation and PC version has some tanks.
The Dreamcast version is the same than N64, only with better graphics, textures, character design and voice acting included, which is why Dreamcast is probably the best version (except that the FMV is missing here too).
#ArmyMenSargesHeroes #ArmyMen #Dreamcast #SargesHeroes #SegaDreamcast
Sarge Hawk and Colonel Grimm narrowly escaped by helicopter from the Tan attack on their Green base, but on the way they spot a Blue tank in the middle of the nearest town, which is very suspicious given the circumstances, and Hawk He decides to go and investigate. Trying to follow the Spy, Sarge enters some kind of strange, illuminated cave or hole, which leads him to what appears to be another world totally different from his own: a vast and gigantic world. But to the misfortune of the Blue spy, the place where they ended up is too small to escape, and Hawk captures him back for debriefing.
The Spy provided a lot of information about the plans of Plastro and the Tan army, about the discovery of the "Portals" and the weapons that Plastro can get from there. Also the whereabouts of the Heroes.
Having rescued Hoover, Riff, Thick, and Shrap, Sarge is informed by Colonel Grimm that Plastro sent an ultimatum to the Green nation: "Surrender or be destroyed." The only option for the Greens is for Hawk to destroy the last remaining portal, but there is a problem: this remains in the most guarded corner of Fort Plastro...
FMV Mod for Army Men: Sarge's Heroes in Sega Dreamcast, adding the video cutscenes.
Sarge's Heroes is a third-person shooting video game developed and published by The 3DO Company for Nintendo 64 in North America on September 28, 1999 and April 14, 2000 in Europe. The player normally controls Sarge Hawk, a sergeant of the Green Army and fights against the evil General Plastro and the Tan Army. The story is the eternal racial war between the Greens and the Tas. This is 3DO's grand attempt to incorporate a recognizable brand into the Army Men franchise. Establish a main cast, updating the generic "Sarge" from the original series to a strongman Sarge Hawk, giving him a squad, a girlfriend and an officer at the helm. It is a very successful launch, despite the fact that Jim Cummings only gives the voice to each male character, resulting quite convincing. This game helped to bring the franchise further to the subseries Sarge's Heroes. Both armies are named after the usual colors of plastic toy army men.
There are two player modes: Campaign and BootCamp, in addition to the Multiplayer mode. In multiplayer mode from 2 to 4 players, players choose their character, faction (color) and difficulty.
The campaign of a player is the main mode of Sarge's Heroes. The player travels through various missions, completing objectives, killing enemies, destroying vehicles and rescuing plastic allies.
The BootCamp is a training level where the player learns the controls. It consists of training areas for all weapons, an obstacle course and a "real fire track".
Exclusive to the PS1 version of the game are the fully animated prerendered scenes, which the Nintendo 64 lacks, thanks to the limited space in the cartridges. Even the Dreamcast version, which is nothing more than an improved copy of the N64, stuck to the pantomime narration in the engine instead of the CGI-animated FMV films.
On N64 you don't have to deal with the clumsy physics and poor collision detection of PS1, even though N64 it's not perfect, it's just much better. DC is not much different to N64, but something worse. It's positive that the lack of verticality of PS1 and PC is not present in N64 and DC, because it adds a whole new dimension to the missions. The N64 version was not optimal in terms of its controls, but it was not as bad as Playstation 1 and PC.
Even though the Army Men games had already established a formula for their third-person shooting games with Army Men 3D, Sarge's Heroes deviates a lot, completely overhauling almost every aspect. The camera perspective, the detail, the movement, the animation; everything has been changed to allow for a faster and less deliberate pace. Sarge Hawk can also jump, which allows for a little climbing on platforms. Pero lo worst is the time it takes the camera that follows the player to adjust itself again, so that the view that we have ahead is not so disconcertingly vacillating.
The worse: the Dreamcast version has a total absence of pilotable vehicles. Only the Playstation and PC version has some tanks.
The Dreamcast version is the same than N64, only with better graphics, textures, character design and voice acting included, which is why Dreamcast is probably the best version (except that the FMV is missing here too).
#ArmyMenSargesHeroes #ArmyMen #Dreamcast #SargesHeroes #SegaDreamcast
Discreetly luxurious Barbados vacation villas on the beautiful West Coast. Surrender to the ultimate sanctuary of luxury and seclusion with a backdrop of magical ocean views, white sandy beaches.
Tutorial Series Japanese Campaign March
audio got stupid for this episode for some reason
The Goal is to Conquer the World. 必勝.
In this vid we see to our goals progressing and also sinking some ships.
Pick up tricks and follow along if you are newer to the game and looking to start as Japan. Feel free to ask questions!
Twitch: https://www.twitch.tv/mrammwguy
Check out Jochen's channel for other tutorials https://www.youtube.com/user/jochenheiden/featured
Join Jochen's discord for talk about the game: https://discord.gg/v4A9STzW7R
I'm glad I was able to purchase this CD before it will go out of print again. The sound quality is excellent.
I recall when back in the day "Fun time" hit the radio stations, A danceable tune with a contagious beat.
"Surrender" is my other favorite song here. Although this was not probably the best album from this duo
compared to "2 Hot!"and "Twice the Fire", it was "worth the wait" to have it re-released on CD. I hope that
"Twice the Fire" can be released on CD very soon.
The previous work was feeling that there was a feeling of tension, but here is a calm couple manzai (excuse!)It does not go until, but it has become a lot of happy feeling.Is there something change between the two people?The duo of men and women can be used to imagine the surrounding area, regardless of whether you prefer or not.The quality of the music is not lowered, but the atmosphere is slightly different.After the success of the disco chart, the first track “FUN TIME” seems to have become a hit tune for this album on Moro. It is now a work of disco classics.
I'm glad I was able to purchase this CD before it will go out of print again. The sound quality is excellent.
I recall when back in the day "Fun time" hit the radio stations, A danceable tune with a contagious beat.
"Surrender" is my other favorite song here. Although this was not probably the best album from this duo
compared to "2 Hot!"and "Twice the Fire", it was "worth the wait" to have it re-released on CD. I hope that
"Twice the Fire" can be released on CD very soon.
The previous work was feeling that there was a feeling of tension, but here is a calm couple manzai (excuse!)It does not go until, but it has become a lot of happy feeling.Is there something change between the two people?The duo of men and women can be used to imagine the surrounding area, regardless of whether you prefer or not.The quality of the music is not lowered, but the atmosphere is slightly different.After the success of the disco chart, the first track “FUN TIME” seems to have become a hit tune for this album on Moro. It is now a work of disco classics.
After 35 years, another secret is revelead showing how Bhagwan worked secretly with Paul Lowe/Teertha and demonstrated how surrender really works. Surrender does not mean playing surrender while having demands and an own will.
Inspector Gagan Singh (Suresh Oberoi) gets a tip about an infamous exiled criminal Munna (Anil Kapoor), entering his jurisdiction, so he checks Munna's file. Singh is shocked to find that Munna is none other than NCC cadet Mahesh Deshmukh, an aspiring officer, whom he had met years ago at a bank in Nasik. In front of the eyes of Singh and Mahesh, a robbery took place and Mahesh's parents who were bank employees were killed. Singh never got to know what happened to Mahesh. Nevertheless, Singh tracks Munna and asks him to surrender. Munna tells him that he has to save his love Mohini (Madhuri Dixit) from the clutches of dreaded gangster Lotiya Pathan (Kiran Kumar). He reveals that he shifted to Bombay (now Mumbai) with his sister Jyoti (Suparna Anand) after the incident. He met a girl named Mohini and fell in love with her. Mohini's father Shyamlal (Anupam Kher) didn't like this relationship. Shyamlal was a drunkard who mooched off the money earned by his dancer wife (Suhas Joshi). When she finally stood up to him, Shyamlal burned her face with sulphuric acid. She died soon afterwards, following which Shyamlal forced Mohini to follow her mother's steps. Anil Kapoor as Mahesh "Munna" Deshmukh Madhuri Dixit as Mohini Anupam Kher as Shyamlal, Mohini's father Chunky Pandey as Baban, Munna's friend Suparna Anand as Jyoti Deshmukh, Munna's younger sister Mandakini as Nikita Sharma (Cameo appearance) Suhas Joshi as Mohini's mother (Cameo appearance) Kiran Kumar as Lotiya Pathan Annu Kapoor as Abbas Ali / Guldasta Suresh Oberoi as Inspector Gagan Singh Tej Sapru as Saxena Johnny Lever as Kainchee, Munna's friend Mahavir Shah as Inspector Gupta Jack Gaud as Mukut Bihari Dinesh Hingoo as Marwadi Seth Achyut Potdar as Munna's father Vijay Patkar as Munna's friend Jaywant Wadkar as Munna's friend
Did Jesus Really Say That? Really? Do you ever before question just exactly how much|just how much|what does it cost?} does Jesus truly ask us to {give up|quit|surrender} for him? Do you check out or listen to points Jesus said as well as question if he truly meant just what he claimed or is there one more meaning? Today we speak regarding|discuss|speak about} exactly what it takes to be a follower of Christ Day By Day!
Surya (Rajnikanth) is an orphan raised in a slum. He finds a friend in the local Godfather (Mamooty). They rule the town and forms a parallel government. Things are well until new district collect(Aravind Swami), step -brother of Surya takes charge. Surya finds his mom (Sreevidya) and decides to surrender.
Shri Radhe Maa, also called Mamtamai Shri Radhe Guru Maa and Guru Maa by her devotees, is a Hindu spiritual teacher and guru from India. Shri Radhe Maa emphasizes the need for surrender to God, humility, truthfulness, self-discipline and self-restrain. Radhe Maa urges devotees to engage with society through initiatives like donation of blood, clothes, food, books and medicines to orphanages, old age homes and sadhus through Mamtamai Shri Radhe Guru Charitable Trust.