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  1. Detailed release information for Blades of Steel. Including release dates, countries, product codes, publishers, developers and other credited companies.

  2. Blades of Steel, later released in Japan as Konamic Ice Hockey (コナミック アイスホッケー, Konamikku Aisu Hokkē), is an ice hockey video game released by Konami for North American arcades in 1987, and ported to the Family Computer Disk System and Nintendo Entertainment System in 1988. All teams are fictional but based out of real ...

    • The Box Art Is Based on A Wayne Gretzky Photo
    • It’S “Get The Pass!”
    • The Japanese Version Is Not Very Good
    • The Teams Actually Have Nicknames
    • The Easy Way to Get A Penalty Shot
    • The Cheap Way to Win The Game
    • There’S A Secret Piece of Music
    • There Are Some Awesome Covers of The Game’S Music
    • There Is A Rare Version of The Game
    • There Was A “Blades of Steel” Hockey Card Set

    It would be understandable if you thought the two players fighting for the puck were just generic hockey guys, but the two players are modeled after Wayne Gretzky and Tomas Jonsson. The photo was taken during the 1983 Stanley Cup Finals between the Oilers and Islanders. On the Blades of Steelbox art, the Oilers uniform colors, the players’ likeness...

    The digitized voice in Blades of Steel was unique at the time, as not many games had speech due to the technical limitations of the Nintendo. The play-by-play, though sparse, still made Blades of Steelfeel a bit more like a television broadcast. But the voice was a bit hard to understand at times. We understood “Face-off,” “Penalty shot,” and, of c...

    Blades of Steel came out in North America in December 1988, right in the middle of the 1988-89 hockey season. In Japan, Konami Ice Hockey came out five months earlier, specifically on July 22, 1988. Apparently, releasing the game five months later in North America gave the developers more time to make a better game, because much of what made Blades...

    The teams in Blades of Steel, at least in the North American and European releases of the games, don’t have nicknames; they were just assigned their city names. Thus, the Chicago team was just “Chicago,” though most of us who grew up in Chicago and played the game liked to think that the team was meant to be the Blackhawks. However, the instruction...

    Anyone who has played Blades of Steelon the NES has no doubt figured this out by now. But for those of you who are playing the game today as DLC on a newer console, here’s a useful tip. Start a fight in front of the opponent’s net, and the referee will stop the play and award you a penalty shot. This works for the other team too, so be careful.

    After getting a lead in Blades of Steel, there’s a cheap way to get a win against a computer opponent. Skate your puck carrier behind your own net. The opposing team’s forechecker will repeatedly run into your goalie and get knocked down trying to get at you. You can just stand there until the clock runs out. I’m surprised some NHL teams haven’t ac...

    You probably remember the music from Blades of Steel, or at the very least the Menu, Game Start, Intermission, Final Score and Game End themes, as those were heard every time the game was played. And you’d probably recognize the three different “Goal” tunes if you heard them. Perhaps less memorable were the tunes that played if the game ended in a ...

    Those who love Blades of Steel no doubt love at least one of the tunes from the game. Maybe it’s the serene music played during the game’s menu screen (which, by the way, is my alarm clock tone on my phone), or the frenetic music at the start of the game. Several musicians were inspired enough by Blades of Steelto record their own cover versions of...

    Blades of Steel for the NES was re-released with altered packaging when Konami decided to reissue its most popular games in 1992. The box and label on the game cartridge have a red frame around the artwork, and the added text “Konami Classic Series” at the top. However, the game itself, as well as the instruction booklet, are unchanged. While it is...

    Well, sort of. Trading card company In The Game issued an insert set called “Blades of Steel,” which could be found in packs of 2017-18 Superlative Hockey cards. These cards embedded a piece of game-used skate blade, from a pair of skates worn by an all-time great, on a trading card. Although these cards had nothing to do with the Blades of Steelga...

  3. Detailed release information for NHL Blades of Steel 2000. Including release dates, countries, product codes, publishers, developers and other credited companies ...

  4. All hockey games are essentially the same as far as rules go (Or so I'm told.), but Blades of Steel puts all the elements of a good hockey game together with a fast paced, aggressive arcade style. Because your defensive player automatically changes to wherever the puck is, it eliminates the frustration of changing your defensive player (Unlike Nintendo's Ice Hockey.).

  5. Blades of Steel, also known as Blades of Steel: The Supreme Hockey Challenge, later released in Japan as Konamic Ice Hockey (コナミック アイスホッケー, Konamikku Aisu Hokkē?), is an ice hockey video game released by Konami for North American arcades in 1987, and ported to the Family Computer Disk System and Nintendo Entertainment System in 1988. All teams are fictional but based ...

  6. Apr 21, 2000 · Description. HAUNTING GOALIES SINCE 1990. In the NHL, where players are a blur and goalies put up brick walls, it's hard to dominate. Jaromir Jagr's been doing it for almost a decade with blinding speed and a non-stop highlight reel of moves. NHL Blades of Steel 2000 is Jagr in a box. Open it up.

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