Mega Man 3 Rom

Mega Man 3 ROM download available for Nintendo. Download Mega Man 3 emulator game and play the NES ROM free. Cross-platform game works on desktop.

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Mega Man 3 (PC10) [!].zip224.13 KBNintendoPlatformCapcom19901 - 2ControllerCartridge18/09/20061038 times Direct Download Play in browser

Synopsis de la rom

Dans Mega Man 3 sur Nes, le petit robot bleu doit de nouveau partir au combat pour éliminer 8 robots devenus fou. Mega Man doit ainsi récupérer leurs huit cristaux de pouvoir. Dans sa quête, le héros est accompagné de Rush, un chien qui l'aidera à retrouver les pierres convoitées.


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Contents.Commands on Controller 2While well-known, the commands for controller 2 are very likely not built-in cheat codes, but rather debugging features that the developers forgot to remove from the game. The European version has these cheats completely removed. Hold Right to give Mega Man a super jump. This also allows you to jump out of pits. Hold Up to slow down the animations. Hold Up + A to freeze the logic timer for some animations, including the player hit animation and some explosions. This will cause bosses and some enemies to freeze in place.Unused Graphics Mega ManA turning sprite for the Magnet Missile.

In the finished game, the missiles change direction immediately, so this isn't used. Interestingly, when MM3 was remade as part of, this sprite did make the cut, suggesting that the programmers either didn't notice it was unused or just thought it was a good idea.What looks like a shooting animation for the Rush Marine. Though the Rush Marine can indeed shoot in the final version, its animation does not change. This animation was put to use in.Break ManGraphics found in the Break Man stage that show Proto Man unmasking himself from his Break Man facade.Both Proto Man and Break Man have graphics for shooting while on the ground. In the final game he only fires while in the air.Gemini ManThis giant planet is supposed to appear at the beginning of Gemini Man's stage.

Despite taking up a large chunk of CHR ROM and using two of the four background palettes, it's never actually seen. The planet's background tiles are placed on the second screen of both versions of Gemini Man's stage, however the stage uses a parallax scrolling technique that only uses the star field background from the first screen, preventing the planet from being seen.

The planet uses background palette 2, while the rings use background palette 1, with the exception of one metatile which mistakenly uses palette 1 in the normal version of the stage.Multiple planets can be seen in early shots of Gemini Man's stage. (Screenshot: Chris Covell) Magnet Man Unused TilesA number of unused tiles for Magnet Man's stage, including electric current, broken platforms, and a little smiley face.It should also be noted that with some of the tiles being broken, there exists a possibility that Magnet Man's stage was once intended to have been reused as a Doc Robot stage instead of Spark Man's. Doc Robot stages tend to have a destruction/decay theme to them, as can be observed in Spark Man's Doc Robot stage.Magnet TurningMagnet Man also has an unused turning sprite for his Magnet Missiles.Snake Man Beam PlatformA construction beam-like platform, defined as block 66 in the game.

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It's a simple solid tile that uses the fourth stage palette.Palette 4 might have changed at some point in development; as it is now, one of the colors is used for the animated cloud effect, and that color is also used on this block, creating an unintended transparency effect.Unknown Blocks In-GameHex ValuesThese eight 16×16 blocks in Snake Man's stage are unused. The original graphics for these blocks were overwritten by the Proto Man stopper used in Gemini Man's stage.The four blocks on the first row, 46-47 and 4E-4F use Palette 4. The blocks on the second row, 56-57 and 5E-5F, use Palette 2. All eight blocks are defined as solid foreground pieces.Spark Man Broken LaddersDespite their appearance, these 16×16 metatiles actually function as a ladder. The upper tile is the top of a ladder, while the lower tile is a standard ladder. They were probably drawn for the destroyed version of the stage, but aren't used in any of the 32×32 metatiles.Junk Piles.

There are a number of 32×32 metatiles depicting large piles of broken electronics. Interestingly, they are the only tiles in the stage that Mega Man can walk behind! It's safe to assume that these were originally placed at the bottom of the long, vertical shaft midway through the stage, in the hallway with the garbage chutes, and Mega Man had to find his way out of the pile.The screenshot on the left is what the area might have looked like; the more compact-looking tiles on the right are actually solid and can be walked on. SpikesThis 16×16 spike metatile is functional, but never used in the stage. It has a black background, unlike the thorny spikes that are actually used in the stage, which have a blue background.Unseen Palette $0F$27$17$00This palette is loaded after descending the first ladder: It replaces the fourth BG palette, which is used by the light panels, the Tama minibosses, and the early 16×16 metatiles mentioned above. It is only loaded for three screens, and doesn't really fit any of the final graphics it's applied to.Wily 1 Early TakeoffFinal TakeoffAn early version of the Dr. Wily scene still exists in the ROM.

The city seen here is a stark contrast to the emptiness of the final version. Notice also that the early version has a large black box at the bottom, presumably for dialogue.To see this layout in-game, use code EAXAAAAA ELXAPAOL before the scene begins.Early SkyFinal SkyThis starry background with moon was replaced with a simpler star field in the final version. Probably done because Wily flies to the left during this scene, and they wanted the background to scroll.To see this layout in-game, use Game Genie code AGXAAAAA ELXAPAOL before the scene begins.These horizontal shutter tiles should have been used to lock the boss arena from the top. It's properly set up as block 0D, with the same definitions as the normal shutter. Interestingly, horizontal shutters appeared in Elec Man and Bomb Man's stages in.Wily 4 EarlyFinalScreen preset 18 is an earlier version of the boss rematch room. The final room was shrunk horizontally, the platforms were moved, and an animated background was added.OtherA picture of Mega Man from behind.

This is found in the same graphics bank as the Mega Man from the Get Weapon screen. Its intended use is unknown.Some kanji characters are used in the Rockman 3 robot information screen (the one with the Robot Masters from Rockman 1), but about half of them aren't used. Interestingly, all but one of these kanji are used in the backstory found in, which strongly suggests (alongside the unusually long opening music) that this game was supposed to have an intro sequence.The only kanji not used in the manual or the game is 犬, 'dog', definitely referring to Rush. Perhaps Rush was supposed to have an entry in the ending? (Source: Lavacopter (manual), divingkataetheweirdo (Kanji translation))These eight letters are also found in the same bank as the unused kanji. They're styled differently from the standard font used everywhere else, and judging from their arrangement, once spelled out 'YOU GOT' and 'AND'.It's possible that the weapon acquisition sequence once used Japanese text for the weapon and Rush adapter names. This is a mockup image of how that would look.Full BorderIn-Game BorderPart of the weapons menu border is cut off by the edges of the screen, so some of the border tiles are 'unused'.

1 minute and 12 seconds worth of this song plays during the ending. A whopping 55 seconds of this track is cut during normal play, but it can be heard in-game by holding Up + A on Controller 2 as Mega Man teleports. It even loops! The whole of the song is available in the Mega Man Legacy Collection Music Player, and a remixed version of the full track would later appear as Proto Man's ending theme in.Proto Man WhistleProto Man's trademark whistle is actually about four times longer than what you normally hear in the game, matching the whistle heard in the intro of the, but with the last note held long. You can hear the full sound by pausing the game at the start of a Proto Man battle, before the regular stage music resumes.Wily Castle Map.

Due to the brevity of map navigation, about four seconds of this Wily Castle map theme is actually used, leaving about 14 seconds completely unheard. It may be possible that the Wily Castle Map intro was meant to be longer than the actual length of the intro in the final version, but due to rushed development the scene was cut short.Oddly, while the intro of the Wily Castle Map in Mega Man 3 of is longer than the NES version, it doesn't use the complete theme, instead repeating the four-second portion used in the NES game.Unused Sound #1. Technically, this sound is used in-game. It's supposed to play when you get a new weapon, but it's interrupted by the menu pop-up sound. In the Rockman Complete Works and Mega Man Anniversary Collection versions, this sound is used and audible.It also should be noted that in the Capcom Music Generation Famicom Music Complete Works Rockman 16 album, the above two songs are recorded in their full glory, and all three unused sound effects can be heard on the 25th track of the second disk that contains all of the sound effects in the game.A similar sound effect is used in and for Enker's Mirror Buster attack.Regional DifferencesSome changes were made to the game when it was released overseas. The version present in is based on the PlayStation port of Rockman 3 and does not have these changes, with the exception of the title logo.Title Screen Rockman 3Mega Man 3Aside from the usual logo change, the Japanese title screen features Mega Man's 'you got.' Sprite on it, the copyright date by Capcom, and a trademark symbol next to the logo.USEuropeIn the international versions, the trademark, copyright, and licensing info is on a separate screen, which fades in first before the title screen.

While the US version specifies being licensed by Nintendo of America, the European version simply states 'Licensed by Nintendo'. Stage Select Rockman 3Mega Man 3Curiously, Rockman 3 uses the Mega Man-style logo as its stage select background. In this wasn't the case and it used the Rockman-style logo for Rockman Mega World in Japan.Room Change Rockman 3Mega Man 3Near the end of Wily stage 1, the Japanese version has a broad platform situated in the top-center of the screen, on which the two large weapon capsules sit. The international versions move them to a smaller, lower one above the door, which forces the player to switch weapons mid-air if they don't want to refill Rush Coil or Rush Jet. The Mega Man Anniversary Collection version of the game re-instates the platforms. They were probably removed due to a glitch caused by failing to defeat the following boss that would cause the player to respawn inside the blocks and therefore become unable to move.Enemy Behavior Rockman 3Mega Man 3In the Japanese version, the bolt and nut enemy in this room in Top Man's stage appears as you're falling from the room above. In the international versions, it doesn't appear until you move to the left half of the platform you land on.Also, before being assembled, the stationary part of these enemies flickers in the international versions.Doc Robot GlitchIn the original Japanese version, the Doc Robot that copies the characteristics of Flash Man only shoots one bullet instead of a bullet spread, and the duration of his Time Stopper is also extremely brief.

You can clearly see him being capable of shooting more than one bullet at a time in case you happen to die against him (in the short time frame before a restart or game over).Water GlitchFor reasons unknown, in the Gemini Man Doc Robot stage, the water in the corridor leading to the second boss room was removed in the international versions, though the water graphics are still there. This causes a water splash and accompanying sound effect to occur when Mega Man enters the water-filled boss room. This was restored to its original Japanese state in the European revision 1 ROM.PausingUnlike in the Japanese version, bringing up the pause menu resets Mega Man's invincibility frames in the US version. Universe at war iso.