
Speaking of the childhood of old players, KONAMI’s“Saloman Snake”(The Japanese version was originally called “Salamander”, the American version was “Life Force”) It is definitely among the best. Now, this side-scrolling shooter from the golden age of arcades in 1986 has been developed by a fan. Rumbleminze hand, formalOriginal transplantto the Super Nintendo.
It’s not an emulator, it runs natively! Also supports physical flash cards and MiSTer
This version is not an emulator or cloud service, but a Super Nintendo native program fully implemented using FastROM / HiROM technology. Whether it is in the Mesen2 simulator, the MiSTer FPGA environment, or the flash card produced by FxPak Pro or MouseBite Labs, it can run stably, evenSupports production of physical cassettescollection!




The screen doesn’t flicker, freeze, or stutter—it’s just more enjoyable than what you played back then.
The NES version back then suffered fromObject flickering and slow motion problems, this time the seal has been completely released on the Super Nintendo Switch. Whether it is the horizontal scrolling intestinal hell or the vertical strafing comet storm, the whole process is smooth and smooth, allowing you to re-experience the past with a modern perspective.Rhythm and pressure。
Enhanced content, upgraded music and color configuration, and adjustable difficulty
Rumbleminze emphasizes not only simple transplantation, but also sincerity:Built-in five sets of CD-quality soundtracks, eight color palettes, difficulty selection switch and destiny adjustment. This means you can decide for yourself whether you want to relive the original sadistic feeling or treat it asCool Game to blast。
From 1986 to 2025, Salamander is alive and better
The original version of “Salomander” was launched in 1986. It shares the world view with “Gradius”, but is the first to create crisscross level switching and two-player cooperation modes. Although there have been many versions such as PC Engine, MSX, and X68000 since then, this Super Nintendo remake is the first 16-bit native version.
The third game in the series will also appear in “Gradius Origins” produced by M2. This is not nostalgia, this is revival.
Salamander 2 was launched back in 1996, but the series has been dormant for many years. Now with the restart plan of “Gradius Origins”,The third game will be officially released soon, this wave of fan-made Super Nintendo transplants of “Salomancer” are undoubtedly the perfect warm-up to past glory!