
It's kind of cool that this collection has Rolling Thunder in it. My cousin and I used to play the unauthorized Tengen-made version on the NES, and I liked how the enemies would melt when you shot them. It was a pretty cool game for its time. I just wish this version had Gaplus in it. I never saw the arcade Rolling Thunder 2, but I do know that Rolling Thunder 2 was released in the US on the Sega Genesis.
I always wished that Namco would include Jr. Pac-Man and Baby Pac-Man in a Namco museum (there's an emulated version of Baby-Pac Man available that includes a recreation of the pinball table.) I do understand that those games were made without Namco's authorization and they were pretty upset that Midway made them without their permission, so they've disavowed them. But Jr. Pac-Man wasn't a bad game. Namco's always had an uneasy stance towards Ms. Pac-Man, since it was also an unauthorized game, and they were probably embarrassed that it sold a LOT better than their own in-huse Super Pac-Man. I notice Ms. Pac-Man isn't in this collection either. :(
It's kind of weird how popular The Tower of Druaga was in Japan. I've played it and it's not one of their better games. The music is kind of catchy though. They had Chunsoft make a Druaga-flavored Mystery Dungeon game and there was a Druaga dungeon, complete with the music and sound effects, in the Gamecube RPG Baten Kaitos.
I think that at one time, Namco had said that Mr. Driller's mother was Kissy from Baraduke. Kissy and Taizo Hori had been married, but got divorced. It's interesting the idea that Namco thinks of their game library as a continuous universe. I wonder where the Tales series fits into that.