Taking the role of a Los Angeles Police Officer, you fight members of the Japanese Mafia. This unique game senses body movement rather than requiring the player to move individual controls.
Keisatsukan Shinjuku 24ji, The was produced by Konami in 2000.
Konami released 434 machines in our database under this trade name, starting in 1978. Konami was based in Japan.
Other machines made by Konami during the time period Keisatsukan Shinjuku 24ji, The was produced include: Beatmania Complete Mix, Racing Jam Chapter 2, Dance Freaks, Thrill Drive, Silent Scope, Beatmania IIDX 2nd Style, Beatmania IIDX 3rd Style, Beatmania IIDX 4th Style, Beatmania IIDX Substream, and Beatmania III
Name | Keisatsukan Shinjuku 24ji, The |
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Developer | Konami (Japan) |
Year | 2000 |
Type | Videogame |
KLOV/MOG # | 8287 |
Class | Wide Release |
Genre | Shooter |
Monitor |
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Conversion Class | unique |
External Device | HDD |
# Simultaneous Players | 1 |
# Maximum Players | 1 |
Game Play | Single |
Control Panel Layout | Single Player |
Controls |
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Cabinet Styles |
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Taking the role of a police officer, you start in Los Angeles and fight your way through the members of the Japanese mafia who are running guns from America to Japan. There are six bosses you must capture in LA and Japan, concluding with the head of the Criminal organization in Japan.
The player moves around shooting enemies and rescuing hostages. Unlike games such as Time Crisis or Maximum Force, the player uses his/her entire body in order to hide or shoot.
The player stands on a yellow foot pad and interacts with the onscreen action by physically dodging left, right and ducking to avoid danger and reload weapons. Three infrared sensors (left, right, center), mounted on a bar overhead, detect the player's body position and reflect that information back to the game. These "real world" actions are reflected on the game screen by making your virtual character interact with obstacles within the game. This added level of interactivity surpasses the standard rail shooters of previous gun games.
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The USA version is called Police 911 in reference to the "911" emergency phone number. The European version is called Police 24/7 referring to them being on duty 24 hours a day, seven days a week.
The European cabinet differs from the US version by using more black and yellow "hazard" coloring in place of the burnished Chrome. Two stereo speakers are mounted at the top of the cabinet and the center channel speaker is mounted in the control panel.
Japanese version of Police 911.
There are 15,264 members of the Video Arcade Preservation Society / Vintage Arcade Preservation Society, 9,669 whom participate in our arcade census project of games owned, wanted, or for sale. Census data currently includes 166,973 machines (7,000 unique titles).
Rare - There are 2 known instances of this machine owned by Keisatsukan Shinjuku 24ji, The collectors who are active members. Of these, 2 of them are only circuit boards which a collector could put into a generic case if desired.
For Sale - There is one active VAPS member with an extra Keisatsukan Shinjuku 24ji, The circuit board for sale.
Wanted - No active members have added this machine to their wish list.
Rarity and Popularity independently are not necessarily indications of value. [More Information]
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