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A playthrough of Taito's 1994 light-gun shooter for the Super Nintendo, Operation Thunderbolt. You can see the bad ending at 22:10. Operation Thunderbolt is an adaptation of Taito's 1988 arcade game of the same name and the direct sequel to Operation Wolf, which saw a release on the NES in 1989 ( • Operation Wolf (NES) Playthrough ). Abul Bazarre, the "warlord of the Bintazi People's Republic," has called upon his terrorist underlings to hijack a plane. He now holds the passengers hostage and is threatening to kill them if his "comrades" aren't released from European prisons. After choosing your player from a pool of six commandos, you're sent into Bintazi on a series of missions to liberate prisoners, blow things up, and retake the plane. The game is essentially a 16-bit remake of Operation Wolf with a Middle East theme: you move a cursor around the screen, shooting bad guys and blowing up vehicles while scrambling for ammo, rocket, and health pick-ups. There are two notable differences, though. The first is that some of the stages now move forward with a crude scaling effect instead of scrolling sideways. The effect works well in the arcade game, but on the SNES, it looks messy and the framerate regularly plunges into single-digit territory. The second change is that your choice of commando has a meaningful impact on the gameplay. Someone with a submachine gun can launch a hail of weak bullets across a large area, but trying to spray-and-pray with an SMG chews through ammo reserves at an unsustainable rate. On the other hand, someone with the slower shotgun has to aim with more precision, but each shot is stronger and impacts a larger area. The game can be played with the gamepad, mouse, or SuperScope. They all work well enough, but I found the mouse controls to be the fastest and most accurate of the three. Operation Thunderbolt is a fun game, but it's also one that fails to play to the strengths of the SNES hardware and ends up being hampered by severe technical shortcomings. Even so, if you're a fan of light-gun shooters, you'll probably have fun with it. _____________ No cheats were used during the recording of this video. NintendoComplete (http://www.nintendocomplete.com/) punches you in the face with in-depth reviews, screenshot archives, and music from classic 8-bit NES games!