Tiny Toon Adventures: Buster's Hidden Treasure (Sniper)
Format: Cartridge
Genre: 2d platformer
Developer: Konami
Publisher: Konami

Graphics
Buster Bunny's design makes him one of the best platformer mascots ever, especially as how he's utilized for this game-- he crouches, runs Sonic-style with legs wheeling, and even ties his ears together to ride ziplines: adorable, all of it; this reviewer could stare at Buster's open-mouthed, giant-toothed "looking up" frame all day! The enemy designs look like they are plucked straight from the cartoon, although stylistically they are a bit at odds with the lusciously-detailed, parallax scrolling-loaded backgrounds.

Sound
The various Genesis sound chip variations, magical in expert hands, were a bit inaccessible to many third-party programmers and their "off the shelf" drivers, and Tiny Toon Adventures' soundtrack is predictably a bit "twiney" sounding at times. And yet, the renditions of the show's many songs are remarkably faithful, and their high notes can be hair-standing in all of the right ways. There is even a Yuzo Koshiro-esque track for the ghost ship stage! Sound effects take inspiration from a variety of sources, least of which are "Sonic the Hedgehog" and "Super Mario World".

Gameplay
Buster's Hidden Treasure is a lengthy platforming escapade-- over thirty levels in total, with password resume. Buster's movement is nuanced, with a great deal of jump height and directional control, to compliment crawling and sliding. None of the ideas are as fleshed out as they could be though: Buster can run at Sonic-like speeds, but this is rarely used in the level design; there is also a "Super Mario Bros. 3"-style map joining the levels, but it's static and uninteresting.

Overall
Like any mainstream platform from the 80s and early 90s, the Mega Drive saw host to all manner of platformers-- a few "best of all time" candidates, a few real clunkers, and a smorgasbord of filler games in the middle. Buster's Hidden Treasure's "check your brain at the door" brand of platforming falls straight into that filler category-- but that's not a bad thing: many levels require great deals of precision, and the game's lovely aesthetic, fun theme, and the sheer fact that it's golden age Konami output, make it a title well worth playing.

Sniper's verdict: