The official super card website announced the new appearance of DSONE at the end of last month.The main difference of the outpacking is the color,changed to dark gray.Absolutely, the inner packing has difference too.Let's have a further look.







Harmonious color-match of the inner packing.


Three languages using manual,including English,Chinese and Japanese.


Since 1987 the five yellow members of the Simpsons have become the most recognized family in the world. Its popularity is fostered a lucrative marketing campaign, and before long the Simpsons were in every facet of entertainment. It was only natural that they would spawn a series of video games. Unfortunately they are terrible on average, but with the movie on the horizon we decided to explore the best of the best.


5) Bart’s House of Weirdness - PC



Never tried this game? Well we can’t say that we blame you. Even by a hardcore collectors standards this is a hard game to come by. The manual has Dr.Marvin Monroe claiming that the game has deep sociological properties: “The elements found in this game are, in most cases, a social commentary of the state of our culture as seen through the eyes of a child of the Nuclear Age”. That may be a stretch, but when fighting Mr.Burns as a boss character and seeing Smithers grovel over him I did learn what the concept of homosexuality was at an early age.

4) Bart and the Beanstalk - Game Boy



There seemed to be a slight prejudice towards centering Simpsons games around Bart. I mean he’s practically in the title of every Simpsons game. However, it makes sense considering how video games were at one time marketed to adolescent males, and boy how things have changed since then. Along with the Sega Genesis, the Game Boy saw the greatest number of Simpsons titles released ; which were on average pieces of complete shit. Oddly enough the game that had the least to do with the tv show turned out to be the best platformer in the series.


3) Bart Vs. The Space Mutants - NES / PC / Game Boy / Genesis / Commodore 64 / Amiga / ZX Spectrum / Amstrad / SMS / Game Gear / Atari ST



Bart Vs. The Space Mutants was the original Simpsons video game, and by far the most widespread ( what the fuck is an Amstrad? ). The game wasn’t very well received by fans because it had little to do with the plot of the actual show, and was incredibly difficult. It still established the series into the digital world, and was a relatively fun title on the NES. Yet to this day I never understood how spray painting people and objects some how defeated space aliens. Are we to believe that they’re part of an intergalactic rival gang that a child can outwit?


2) Hit and Run! - Gamecube / PS2 / Xbox / PC




Any Grand Theft Auto clone will produce decent results, and Hit and Run is no exception. It featured similar gameplay to Simpsons: Road Rage, where the primary task is to drive around Springfield to accomplish various goals. Since developers seem to have creative difficulty in inventing villains, Kang and Kodos once again take their positions as the final bosses. Adapting a game from a series that has spanned over eighteen years, featuring hundreds of antagonists, and game creators seem to think these two green blobs are the most threatening things since Hitler.

1) The Simpsons Arcade Game - Arcade / PC



In 1991 The Simpsons Arcade Game was released to give humanity an unprecedented leap in happiness. Konami borrowed the Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles game engine, after recognizing that they had already achieved perfection a few years prior. This game is also historically significant by being the first arcade machine I ever beat from beginning to end in a single play; costing me 13.50$ ( that’s 54 lives, dying nearly seven times a level ). After spending a child's fortune, I was certain that I would be rewarded for my efforts, and that some supreme secret of the Simpsons universe would now be bestowed on me. Instead, after watching the cast walk into the distance, the game jumped back to the first level only to be played all over again.