Cheetahmen The initial game of this franchise was included on the
Action 52 multi-game cartridge for the NES. It was inconsistently titled "Cheetah Men", "Cheetahmen", "Cheetamen", and "The Cheetahmen" within the game selection screen, title screen, and marketing materials. Gameplay consists of six levels, two for each of the three Cheetahmen. The second level includes a boss battle. Most of in-game enemies are characters from the other games of the
Action 52 cartridge, including Satan Hosain, a parody of former president of Iraq
Saddam Hussein.
Cheetahmen II There were plans for a sequel,
Cheetahmen II, but it was not completed (6 of 10 proposed levels were made) and was never officially released. In 1996, however, 1,500 copies of the game were found in a warehouse in Florida and eventually put on sale on the secondary market. All copies of the game were reused
Action 52 cartridges, some with a small gold sticker reading "". This cartridge is now very rare and hard to find. In
Cheetahmen II, the player again assumes the role of one of the three Cheetahmen (Aries, Apollo and Hercules); after defeating a boss at the end of the second level, they switch to the next Cheetahman for the following two levels, as in the
Action 52 version. Due to a bug, it is impossible to get to the levels in which one plays Cheetahman Aries without altering the ROM image or experiencing a glitch that very rarely starts the game on these two levels. A patch fixing all the game-breaking bugs was made freely available by romhacking.net member PacoChan in July 2011. Subsequently, a "fixed" version of the game titled
Cheetahmen II: The Lost Levels was developed by Greg Pabich. The new version of the game was released on an actual NES cartridge and was intended to fix the fourth level end glitch found in the original game. To fund the game, Pabich started a
Kickstarter program in which donors would be given rewards depending on the amount of money pledged. The program started on August 6, 2012, and lasted until September 6. As a promotional tie-in with the project, a video was shot starring
James Rolfe (who initially gave the unreleased game a negative review on his
Angry Video Game Nerd series),
Patrick Contri (better known as Pat the NES Punk), The Game Chasers, and Pabich himself advertising the game. The Kickstarter was met with controversies regarding deceit or fraudulence on behalf of Pabich.
Cheetahmen III A third game in the series,
Cheetahmen III, was in development exclusively for the Action Gamemaster, a handheld
multi-cartridge and
CD-ROM clone console also being developed by Active Enterprises named after the intro character of the same name announced at the 1994's
Consumer Electronics Show. The system was to have been in the sense of
Nintendo's
Game Boy and the
Atari Lynx, but with much greater aspirations. It would have featured compatibility with the NES,
Sega Genesis and
SNES cartridge games, as well as
CD-ROM games, via separate modules that would be interchangeable with the system and were to retail individually despite concerns of the system being too large and cumbersome to handle. Features would have included a 3.2" color LCD screen, CD player, TV tuner, built-in battery charger, and a cigarette-lighter adapter for cars. Both the game and console are now considered vaporware as there has been no official word on their cancellation, likely due to Active closing their doors to the gaming market entirely that same year. There is no additional data for
Cheetahmen III in terms of what kind of game it would've been. ==References==