Do you need anything else? It's no Blades of Steel (hell EA's NHL09 isn't Blades of Steel), but growing up in Minnesota and playing on a hockey team ensured that this one was in the NES as much as Super Mario 3. I think I've got the same fond memory for this one as everyone else does: skinny dude, medium dude, and fat dude. The only game that ended up rivaling this excellent design was Konami's Blades of Steel, but the two were different enough to own and enjoy both (which is why you'll find Blades on this countdown). Every Ice Hockey player discovered their own perfect combination of men, and then it was on to the ice. You could choose from three different player body types, and outfit your team with any combination of them fast but weak Skinny Guys, brawny but slow Fat Guys, or well-balanced, middle-ground Normal Guys. This game of skating and slap shots was perfectly balanced, simple fun with just the right touch of planning and strategy to keep things interesting match after match. None of those games ended up having the lasting appeal and addictiveness of one of its other contemporaries, though – the first-party Nintendo sports sim known simply as Ice Hockey. Nintendo had a fairly diverse lineup of sports titles introduced for the NES early on in the system's life cycle, including 8-bit interpretations of soccer, tennis, volleyball and even downhill slalom skiing. Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles II: The Arcade Game But the performance kits are still available through and various other Mopar Performance Parts dealers, for 2013 to present Charger and Challenger R/T models.Skate or Die 2: The Search for Double Troubleīattletoads & Double Dragon: The Ultimate TeamĪ Boy and His Blob: Trouble on Blobolonia So what happened to the performance kits? Well, the performance kits were short-lived, considering that the cost of the kits and the introduction of the R/T Scat Pack models for the 2015 model year pretty much put them to the wayside. That’s a lot more money than the new (at the time) $39,995 price on a 2015 Dodge Charger R/T Scat Pack with 485 horsepower and 475 lb.-ft of torque compared to the R/T Stage 3 power rating of 428 horsepower and 442 lb.-ft of torque. If you add that to the price of an entry-level 2015 Dodge Charger R/T for $33,595 for a total of $42,680. Scat Pack Stage Performance Kit Cost (all prices are in U.S.): Only 50 of these kits were produced for the year, making it one of the rarest of the Mopar edition cars to date. Mopar did offer the Scat Pack Stage 1 kit as part of it’s Mopar ’15 Performance Package for the 2015 Dodge Charger R/T. Mopar ’15 Performance Kit for 2015 Dodge Charger R/T. Dodge and Chrysler both showcased the performance packages on many of their concept cars, such as the… The overall package was very neat idea at the time.
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