![]() ![]() Memory card A must have a save file on it. The following trick gives you extra cards for free without dueling or using starchips. If done correctly, you should have doubled the cards that you wanted. Next, go to trade and put all the cards you traded to memory card B into memory card A. Memory card A should now have your old file with all the cards that you traded to memory card B. Return to the PlayStation memory manager and copy the saved game file from memory card C and put it back in memory card A. Trade the cards that you want from memory card A to memory card B, then reset the game. This memory card be should also have a game in it with a different I.D. Copy the Yu-Gi-Oh Forbidden Memories saved game file to memory card C. Memory card A should have the cards you want to duplicate. ![]() Refer to the memory cards as A, B, and C. One can be a PlayStation2 memory card if needed. While the international version still received critical acclaim for its gameplay and graphics, the decision to remove most of the plot was heavily criticized by Western critics and gamers, since Namco initially advertised that the Western release would featured all the content seen in Japanese version.Three memory cards are required for this trick. To accommodate for the Japanese plot not being translated, all story related voice acting and cut-scenes were removed, along with the plot being rewritten to a more basic story with no voice acting. While Namco never officially explained why this occurred, many speculated it was due to sales being lower than expected for the Japanese release, along with the impending release of the PlayStation 2. English voice acting was planned and started recording in the early stages, but Namco cut the funding for the translation efforts. ![]() While nothing was changed from the overall gameplay, its campaign was stripped down to a 1-disc 36 mission campaign with no branching paths. It also featured fully voiced anime cut-scenes, along with in-game radio chatter.The international version of Ace Combat 3 was released in 2000. The Japanese version of Ace Combat 3 released in 1999 featured a lengthy 2-disc campaign of 52 missions that were split among different paths depending on in-mission decisions, along with multiple endings and multiple factions for the player to join. The third installment in the Ace Combat series of console flight simulation games, Electrosphere takes the contemporary setting of the first two games into a story set in the mid-21st century, involving a war between multinational corporations.The game is notable for having two radically different releases for the Japanese and Western markets. Ace Combat 3: Electrosphere (エースコンバット3 エレクトロスフィア, Ēsu Conbatto San Erekutorosufia) is a flight simulation game made by Namco for the PlayStation game console. ![]()
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