The House of the Dead 2 Gun Set
スーパースピード・レーシング-
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Bundled with Dreamcast Gun. Lack the packaging for the set, only have the game packaging. Disc and game case are marked HDR-0011 from the set, not HDR-0007 from the standalone version.
Bundled Item
Description
The House of the Dead 2 is a rail shooter where you take on the role of AMS agents battling through a zombie outbreak in Venice, Italy, with branching paths, civilian rescues, and boss fights. Enemies lurch into view with exaggerated animations, and civilians occasionally appear, offering score bonuses or alternate routes if rescued. Boss fights punctuate each stage, each with a distinct weak point and grotesque design, from the axe‑wielding Judgment to the serpentine Hierophant. This took over and the premier arcade light gun experience at home from Virtua Cop and Virtua Cop 2 on the Saturn.
The Gun Set provided the same tactile experience and immersion of the arcade. The included Dreamcast Gun was a grey, pistol‑shaped peripheral with a trigger, D‑pad, and start button compatible with CRT televisions only, using line‑scan technology to detect aim and fire. The gun’s design echoed Sega’s arcade hardware, and its responsiveness made it ideal for fast, precise shooting, a necessity in The House of the Dead 2, where accuracy and reaction time are key to survival.
The game’s tone is unapologetically campy and theatrical. Voice acting is stilted and melodramatic, giving the dialogue a surreal charm that’s become iconic. The environments are stylised and gothic, with crumbling architecture, flickering torches, and eerie lighting that evoke a haunted‑house atmosphere. The House of the Dead 2 plays with ideas of bioethics, hubris, and apocalypse, though always through the lens of pulp horror. Goldman’s plan to “cleanse” humanity is framed as a twisted form of evolution, and the game’s grotesque enemies reflect the consequences of unchecked experimentation.
Compared with the Dreamcast port of Virtua Cop 2, the gameplay depth and stylistic direction is far more developed. Both series were a staple of 1990s arcades, and the Dreamcast port provided an accurate, high fidelity experience that preserved its fast pace and visual style.
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