Dynamite Cop | |
---|---|
Developer(s) | AM1 |
Publisher(s) | Sega |
Director(s) | Makoto Uchida |
Producer(s) | Rikiya Nakagawa |
Designer(s) | Makoto Uchida |
Composer(s) | Howard Drossin |
Platform(s) | Arcade, Dreamcast |
Release | ArcadeDreamcast |
Genre(s) | Beat 'em up |
Mode(s) | Single-player, multiplayer |
Arcade system | Sega Model 2 |
Dynamite Cop, known in Japan as Dynamite Deka 2 (ダイナマイト刑事2, Dainamaito Deka Tsu), is a 1998 beat 'em up video game published by Sega and initially released in arcades on Sega Model 2 hardware. It is the sequel to the 1996 game Dynamite Deka, which was released outside Japan as Die Hard Arcade. The game was ported to the Dreamcast and released internationally in 1999, this time without the Die Hard license. A second sequel, Asian Dynamite, was released only in arcades. In 2002, an Xbox version was announced by Sega and Cool Net Entertainment under the joint brand name "CoolCool", but since then there has been no information and the project has been abandoned. CoolCool itself has not released anything other than Rent-a-Hero No. 1 and appears to have disappeared.[3]