Chester Cheetah: Wild Wild Quest
Details: Video game
Initial Release Date: 1993
Developer: Kaneko
Genre: Platform game
Publisher: Kaneko
Platforms: Sega Genesis, Super Nintendo Entertainment System
Description: Chester Cheetah: Wild Wild Quest is a 1993 video game that starred Cheetos mascot Chester Cheetah. It is the sequel to Chester Cheetah: Too Cool to Fool. The game is designed much like Super Mario World in which the player navigates through levels in a map, and the game is also a platformer. Players must explore the entire United States looking for 10 pieces of a map to Hip City, USA avoiding or defeating enemies. Levels include a ship, in front of a castle, under the sea, and inside the city. Each level comes with a time limit and each hit results in an "instant death" situation unless the Cheetos snacks have been consumed. The main adversary in the game is Mean Eugene; Chester's main adversary in the commercials. Each level comes with a boss at the end and losing the game gives the players a limited number of continues. Both the Genesis and the Super NES versions of the game come with an option mode that allows players to alter their controls.
Initial Release Date: 1993
Developer: Kaneko
Genre: Platform game
Publisher: Kaneko
Platforms: Sega Genesis, Super Nintendo Entertainment System
Description: Chester Cheetah: Wild Wild Quest is a 1993 video game that starred Cheetos mascot Chester Cheetah. It is the sequel to Chester Cheetah: Too Cool to Fool. The game is designed much like Super Mario World in which the player navigates through levels in a map, and the game is also a platformer. Players must explore the entire United States looking for 10 pieces of a map to Hip City, USA avoiding or defeating enemies. Levels include a ship, in front of a castle, under the sea, and inside the city. Each level comes with a time limit and each hit results in an "instant death" situation unless the Cheetos snacks have been consumed. The main adversary in the game is Mean Eugene; Chester's main adversary in the commercials. Each level comes with a boss at the end and losing the game gives the players a limited number of continues. Both the Genesis and the Super NES versions of the game come with an option mode that allows players to alter their controls.