

You can control this game easily by using the keyboard of your PC (see the table next to the game). Worldwide, approximately 62 million units of this console were sold at approximately price $ 100 per unit. In that time, it was the best-selling video game console for which more than 700 licensed games and a number of non-licensed This version of NARC was designed for the Nintendo Entertainment System (NES), which was an eight-bit video game console manufacturedīy Nintendo in the years 1983 - 2003. įind digital download of this game on GOG or Steam. īuy original game or NES console on or. More details about this game can be found on .įind this game on video server or. This is then added to a tally at the end of the level along with drugs and money confiscated from other enemies that they dropped when killed (the game awards more points at the end of a round for arresting enemies without killing them). Some enemies can be arrested after they surrender and then float away with 'busted' over them. When an enemy is dispatched using the latter, they explode in a torrent of scorched and bloody appendages. Max and Hit are each equipped with an automatic weapon and a missile launcher. The player controls either Max Force or Hit Man, who shoot or arrest junkies, drug dealers, and organized crime kingpins. Big, head of an underground drug trafficking and terrorist organization. The game's main characters are Max Force and Hit Man, who have received a memo from Spencer Williams, Narcotics Opposition chairman in Washington, D.C. In 2005, the franchise was re-launched with a brand new game for the Xbox and PS2. It was also ported to the NES in 1990 by Rare.
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Narc was ported to the Commodore 64, Atari ST, Amiga, ZX Spectrum, and Amstrad CPC home computers by Ocean Software in 1990.

It was the first game in the newly restarted Williams Electronics coin-op division, after being acquired by Midway.

The object is to arrest and kill drug offenders, confiscate their money and drugs, and defeat 'Mr. It was one of the first ultra-violent video games and a frequent target of parental criticism of the arcade game industry. Narc is a 1988 arcade game designed by Eugene Jarvis for Williams Electronics and programmed by George Petro. Unfortunately, this game is currently available only in this version. If you think that the game in your browser doesn't work as it should, try to choose another online emulator from this table.
