[1986] Castlevania for NES in Upscaled 4K

[1986] Castlevania for NES in Upscaled 4K

Ultra-HD NOOBZ gameplay of Castlevania from 1986 on NES. Recorded in 4K @ 3840x2160 using RetroArch Emulator Nestopialibretrocore core with ScaleFX Shader. Uncompressed video. UltraHD Noobz ~ Ever wondered what the greatest games of all times are actually like for NOOBZ? We are not experts at games we play. We do not use cheats or tool-assists. We record gameplay in Ultra-HD with the best possible graphics. We appreciate original game visuals but on our channel we try to push the limits of original graphics using upscalers, shaders, filters, hi-res textures and mods to optimize graphics for gaming on a large 4K monitor. UltraHD Noobz ~ Game: Castlevania Release Date: 1986 Platform: NES Developer: Konami Genre: Platformer Hardware/Software: RetroArch Emulator Nestopialibretrocore. We own a original copy of all games we play. Mods: None Graphics: 4K @ 3840x2160 with ScaleFX Shader Castlevania is an action-platformer video game developed and published by Konami for the Family Computer Disk System video game console in Japan in September 1986. It was ported to cartridge format and released in North America for the Nintendo Entertainment System (NES) in May 1987 and in Europe in 1988. It was also re-issued for the Family Computer in cartridge format in 1993. Players control Simon Belmont, who has entered Castlevania to defeat Count Dracula. It is the first game in Konami's Castlevania video game series. It was developed in tandem with the MSX2 game Vampire Killer, which was released a month later but features different gameplay mechanics. Castlevania was followed by an NES sequel, Castlevania II: Simon's Quest, and an NES prequel, Castlevania III: Dracula's Curse. Super Castlevania IV, which follows the same setting, was released in 1991 for the Super Nintendo. A remake of the game for the Sharp X68000 home computer was re-released for the PlayStation as Castlevania Chronicles in 2001. Castlevania was positively received and financially successful. It is considered an NES classic by PC World, while Nintendo Power and Game Informer ranked it in their list of best video games ever made. [Wiki]