Difference between revisions of "BMB"

From Sega Retro

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==Softography==
 
==Softography==
{{CompanyHistoryAll|BMB}}
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===[[Mega Drive]]===
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*''Kung Fu Panda'' ({{gte}} 2010) - ''[[Brutal: Paws of Fury]]'' hack
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*''Avatar'' ({{gte}} 2010) - ''[[Jim Power: The Arcade Game]]'' hack
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*''Pirates of the Caribbean'' ({{gte}} 2010) - ''[[Daikoukai Jidai II]]'' hack
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*''Shrek'' ({{gte}} 2010) - ''[[Yogi Bear]]'' hack
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*''Shrek 2'' ({{gte}} 2010) - ''[[The Ottifants]]'' hack
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*''Smeshariki'' ({{gte}} 2010) - ''[[Mr. Nutz]]'' hack
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*''[[Tanki 2011]]'' (2011)
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*''[[Mario 3: Around the World]]'' (2011?)
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*''[[Mario 4: Space Odyssey]]'' (2011?)
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*''[[Felix the Cat]]'' (2011?)
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*''[[Chip 'n Dale Rescue Rangers]]'' (2011?)
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*''[[Chip 'n Dale Rescue Rangers 2]]'' (2012?)
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*''[[Darkwing Duck]]'' (2012?)
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*''[[Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles: The Legend Returns]]'' (2012?)
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*''[[Ben 10]]'' (2012)
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*''Ralph'' ({{gte}} 2012) - ''[[Fix-It Felix Jr.]]'' hack translation into Russian
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*''[[Angry Birds in Russia]]'' (2013)
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*''[[Angry Birds: Star Wars]]''  (2013)
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*''Call of Duty Ghosts'' (2013) - ''[[Time Trax]]'' hack
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*''[[Plants vs. Zombies]]'' (2013?)
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*''[[World of Tanks]]'' (2013?)
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*''[[Iron Man]]'' (2014)
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*''[[Lego Batman]]'' (2014)
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*''[[Lego Pirates of the Caribbean]]'' (2014)
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*''[[The Adventures of the Gummi Bears]]'' (2014)
  
 
==References==
 
==References==

Revision as of 18:18, 6 March 2023

Notavailable.svg
BMB
Headquarters:
Russia

BMB (possibly pronounced as "VMV" since these are Cyrillic letters) is the only known alias of a developer based in Russia. They are responsible for various unlicensed Sega Mega Drive games during the 2010s, and they are closely related to KDS, the publisher who distributed most of their games on the Mega Drive on the Russian market. Typically, they go uncredited in their games, but there are enough similarities between their games to be identifiable as a single developer. It's unknown what BMB stands for exactly, but it most likely might be the developer's initials.

Their games generally range of homebrew platformers, Battle City clones, ports of games from other platforms such as the NES, or hacks of existing games. Many of their games commonly share several aspects, which include the use of Shiru's VGM Music Maker as a sound driver with music and sound effects stolen from various sources such as UWOL: Quest for Money, Star Fox and sample songs, plagiarised graphics, introductory and ending images composed of static images and text, and violent/gory Continue and Game Over screens that lead the games to internet notoriety.

Softography

Mega Drive

References