Mamono Hunter Youko - Dai 7 no Keishou
Mamono Hunter Youko - Dai 7 no Keishou remains one of the finest action experiences on the Sega Genesis. Its innovative design and addictive gameplay have earned it a permanent place in gaming history.
- Developer
- NCsoft
- Released
- 1991
- Platform
- Mega Drive
- Genre
- Action
- Players
- 1P
- Rating
- 4.7 / 5 (841)
- Last updated
Mamono Hunter Youko - Dai 7 no Keishou Controls — Mega Drive Keyboard Keys
Default keyboard bindings for Mamono Hunter Youko - Dai 7 no Keishou on our in-browser Mega Drive emulator. Plug in a USB or Bluetooth gamepad to auto-detect mappings, or rebind any key from the emulator settings menu.
| Keyboard | Console button | Typical use |
|---|---|---|
| ↑ | D-Pad Up | Move up |
| ↓ | D-Pad Down | Move down |
| ← | D-Pad Left | Move left |
| → | D-Pad Right | Move right |
| X | A | Primary action (jump / confirm) |
| Z | B | Secondary action (attack / cancel) |
| S | C | Tertiary action |
| A | X | Quaternary action |
| Q | Y | Fifth button |
| W | Z | Sixth button |
| Enter | Start | Start / Pause |
These bindings cover the 6-button Mega Drive controller. Most older titles only use buttons A/B/C; the extra X/Y/Z buttons matter for Street Fighter II and other 6-button fighters.
Rebind any key from the EmulatorJS in-game settings menu (gear icon → Controls). A connected gamepad auto-maps to the same buttons.
Mamono Hunter Youko - Dai 7 no Keishou Longplay & Gameplay Videos
Watch a full playthrough of Mamono Hunter Youko - Dai 7 no Keishou on Mega Drive before you dive in — recommended for getting a feel for the game's pacing, story beats, and difficulty curve.
Watch longplay on YouTube
"Mamono Hunter Youko - Dai 7 no Keishou" Mega Drive longplay 1991
Mamono Hunter Youko - Dai 7 no Keishou Cheat Codes
8 community-curated cheats for Mamono Hunter Youko - Dai 7 no Keishou. Tick any to activate them automatically when you click "Play with cheats" — or copy a code into your own emulator.
-
Infinite lives
AJEA-AA8AFF7F94:0063 -
Infinite energy
ATMA-AA3A+ATMA-AA3TE2MA-AR28FF011F:00BF -
Infinite Time
AJ5T-AA7NAJ5T-AA6W -
Freeze Time
FF7F81:0037 -
Infinite Credit
FF7F95:0007 -
Last Level
FF0008:0004 -
Jump Midair
FF0109:00D0 -
Invincibility
RYLT-A616
External references
Frequently Asked Questions
When was Mamono Hunter Youko - Dai 7 no Keishou released?
Mamono Hunter Youko - Dai 7 no Keishou was released in 1991 for the Mega Drive.
Who developed Mamono Hunter Youko - Dai 7 no Keishou?
Mamono Hunter Youko - Dai 7 no Keishou was developed by NCsoft, available to play in your browser on RetroGameSpace.
How many players does Mamono Hunter Youko - Dai 7 no Keishou support?
Mamono Hunter Youko - Dai 7 no Keishou is a single-player Action game for the Mega Drive.
What type of game is Mamono Hunter Youko - Dai 7 no Keishou?
Mamono Hunter Youko - Dai 7 no Keishou is a Action game for the Mega Drive, playable instantly in your browser — no downloads, no installs.
How can I play Mamono Hunter Youko - Dai 7 no Keishou for free?
Open this page and click "Play Now" — Mamono Hunter Youko - Dai 7 no Keishou runs free in your browser via WebAssembly emulation. No account, no payment, no installer.
Do I need to download anything to play Mamono Hunter Youko - Dai 7 no Keishou in the browser?
No. Mamono Hunter Youko - Dai 7 no Keishou streams from a public archive into a browser-side Mega Drive emulator. Nothing is installed on your computer.
Can I save my progress in Mamono Hunter Youko - Dai 7 no Keishou?
Yes. Save states are stored in your browser (IndexedDB) per game, and you can also use any in-game save the original Mega Drive cartridge supported.
Does Mamono Hunter Youko - Dai 7 no Keishou work on mobile devices?
Yes — the Mega Drive emulator runs on iOS Safari and Android Chrome. Touch controls overlay the game; landscape mode is recommended.
Is it legal to play Mamono Hunter Youko - Dai 7 no Keishou this way?
RetroGameSpace is a transient caching reverse-proxy and does not host first-party copies of Mamono Hunter Youko - Dai 7 no Keishou. Game files are fetched on demand from publicly-accessible archives. You are responsible for compliance with your local laws and the bring-your-own-ROM principle.