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Alpha Mission II (ASO - Armored Scrum Object 2) アルファミッション2
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1991 |
No summary. |
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Alpha Mission (ASO - Armored Scrum Object) アルファミッション
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1985 |
No summary. |
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Scrum Try
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1984 |
No summary. |
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ASO ASO
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1985 |
No summary. |
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Armored Car アーマードカー
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1981 |
Kinda Tutankham meets Rally-X. Typical Stern release. |
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Armored Warriors
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1994 |
No summary. |
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Elevator Action エレベーターアクション
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1984 |
Your mission as Secret Agent 17(code name "Otto") is to find the secret documents behind red doors and then escape in your getaway car. As you travel by elevator and stairs, avoid enemies or immobilize them by force if necessary. |
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Acrobat Mission アクロバットミッション
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1990 |
No summary. |
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Earth, Friend, Mission アース・フレンド・ミッション
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1982 |
Nutting Associates 3D color vector prototype, pitched to be the arcade version of the movie Tron |
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Last Mission ラストミッション
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1986 |
No summary. |
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Mission 660
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1987 |
No summary. |
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Mission X ミッションX
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1982 |
No summary. |
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Mission: XX XXミッション
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1987 |
No summary. |
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XX Mission ダブルエックスミッション
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1987 |
No summary. |
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Arian Mission
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1985 |
Also known as Alpha Mission. |
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S.R.D. Mission
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1986 |
No summary. |
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S.S. Mission
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1992 |
No summary. |
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Submarine サブマリン
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1979 |
This is a mechanically controlled game, possibly built before pong.
Produced by Namco (as marked on case). The object of the game is to aim through the periscope and shoot torpedoes at ships moving back and forth in the ocean. |
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Street Fighter Alpha 3 ストリートファイターZERO3
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1998 |
Known as Street Fighter Zero 3 in Japan. Street Fighter Alpha 3 arcade, released in 1998 on CPS2 hardware, features 31 characters and an adjustable "ism" system, allowing tailored playstyles with A-, X-, or V-ism, and expanded the Alpha series’ mechanics and roster. |
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Street Fighter EX ストリートファイターEX
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1996 |
Street Fighter EX blends 2D and 3D movement with systems from SFII and Alpha, featuring segmented super meters, Guard Breaks that stun, and Cancel/Super Cancel mechanics for chaining attacks and multiple Super Combos. |
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Alpha
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1983 |
No summary. |
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Alpha One
|
1983 |
Prototype of Major Havoc. |
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Plus Alpha
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1989 |
No summary. |
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Moon Alpha ムーンアルファ
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1979 |
No summary. |
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Alpha Z, The
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1986 |
No summary. |
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Keith Courage In Alpha Zones
|
1987 |
No summary. |
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Alpha Invader アルファインベーダー
|
1979 |
No summary. |
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Street Fighter Alpha 2 Gold ストリートファイターZERO2′
|
1996 |
This is a Japanese only release after Street Fighter Alpha 2 to please the Japanese pundits with the addition of Evil Ryu and other new modes of play. |
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Street Fighter Alpha: Warriors’ Dreams ストリートファイターZERO
|
1995 |
Yet another fighter. In Japan known as Street Fighter Alpha. |
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Street Fighter Alpha 2 ストリートファイターZERO2
|
1996 |
Known as Street Fighter Zero 2 in Japan. Street Fighter Alpha 2 introduced Custom Combos, Alpha Counters, and advanced CPS2 graphics and sound, becoming a balanced and competitive arcade favorite. |
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Bucky O'Hare バッキーオハラのスチャラカ空中戦
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1992 |
Bucky's mission is to destroy each planet boss and rescue his crews and
infiltrate into the Toad's spaceship and stop their ambition of universe
domination. |
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Ninja Taro
|
1992 |
As a ninja in ancient Japan, you are on a mission to find out if rumors are true about an evil emperor. |
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Super Street Fighter II Turbo スーパーストリートファイターIIX
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1994 |
Super Street Fighter II Turbo arcade ran on CPS2 hardware with advanced graphics and Q-Sound audio, introduced the Super Combo system, selectable speed settings, and the hidden character Akuma. |
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Shinobi 忍
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1987 |
You play a ninja on a one man mission out to destroy a evil force and
save kidnapped hostages. |
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Super Street Fighter II: The New Challengers スーパーストリートファイターII
|
1993 |
Super Street Fighter II arcade expanded the roster to 16 characters, improved graphics and audio, rebalanced gameplay, added a scoring system and color options, and introduced an eight-player Tournament Battle mode. |
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Kuhga - Operation Code Vapor Trail 空牙 – Operation Code Vapor Trail
|
1989 |
In 1999, a terrorist organization known only as DAGGER has occupied the city of New York where they have hacked into military defenses world-wide, established their own military command and gained access to nuclear missile silos. They hold the world hostage in this position and promise to cancel their threats of destroying the Earth only until the world's governments relinquish their power to DAGGER. |
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Street Fighter III: New Generation ストリートファイターIII
|
1997 |
Sequel to Street Fighter II. Street Fighter III introduces parrying, Super Arts, and extended hit stun mechanics, combining traditional 1-on-1 combat with new movement, attack, and combo options |
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Libble Rabble リブルラブル
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1983 |
An obscure Namco release, Libble Rabble was designed by Toru Iwatani after his huge success with Pac-Man. Although it was not particularly popular, Iwatani claimed that it was his own personal favorite of the games he designed. |
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Street Fighter EX2 ストリートファイターEX2
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1998 |
Street Fighter EX2 expands EX Plus with Guard Breaks, Super Canceling, and introduces Excel Combos, allowing timed chains of varied basic and special moves with move restrictions. |
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Kuuga – Operation Code Vapor Trail 空牙 – Operation Code Vapor Trail
|
1989 |
Vapor Trail: Hyper Offense Formation, known in Japan as Kuuga – Operation Code Vapor Trail (空牙 – Operation Code Vapor Trail) and usually simply referred to as Vapor Trail, is a 1989 shoot 'em up arcade game developed and published by Data East. Vapor Trail was followed by Rohga: Armor Force and Skull Fang. |
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Vapor Trail 空牙
|
1989 |
Vapor Trail: Hyper Offense Formation, known in Japan as Kuuga – Operation Code Vapor Trail (空牙 – Operation Code Vapor Trail) and usually simply referred to as Vapor Trail, is a 1989 shoot 'em up arcade game developed and published by Data East. Vapor Trail was followed by Rohga: Armor Force and Skull Fang. |
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Time Traveler タイムトラベラー
|
1991 |
You are a cowboy who goes through time to destroy the Evil
Scientist and Rescue the Princess to save the Universe. |
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Dragon Buster ドラゴンバスター
|
1984 |
Platformer with a sword. Your mission: save the princess.
|
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Super Street Fighter IV スーパーストリートファイターIV
|
2009 |
Super Street Fighter IV: Arcade Edition, released in Japanese arcades on December 16, 2010, added four new characters, gameplay adjustments, and used the NESYS Card system for tracking player rankings. |
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Street Fighter II: The World Warrior ストリートファイターII
|
1991 |
Street Fighter II arcade, released in 1991, pioneered the fighting genre with eight unique fighters and six-button controls, spawning multiple updated versions with new characters, moves, and mechanics. |
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Qix クイックス
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1981 |
Qix (pronounced "kicks") is a simple and elegant game in which you claim territory by drawing boxes to fill a rectangular space. You must avoid the Qix – sticklike objects that float and bounce through your space in unpredictable patterns. You can rack up more points for creating boxes more slowly, and besides the Qix, you must be careful of Sparx and Fuses which appear if your marker stops while you are drawing. |
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Super Locomotive スーパーロコモティブ
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1982 |
Super Locomotive is a split screen scrolling game. The aim is to reach the end of each section without being run into by the opposition and without running red lights.
|
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Cabal カベール
|
1989 |
Third person (behind player). Use a trackball to control a soldier and his aiming crosshair, and conduct attacks on various enemies. This game has quite a few "pseudo-hidden" power-ups and suprises. |
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Street Fighter EX2 Plus ストリートファイターEX2プラス
|
1999 |
Street Fighter EX2 Plus adds new and returning characters, introduces Meteor Combos for all fighters, and refines Excel Combos to allow repeated moves in sequences. |
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Hyper Street Fighter II: The Anniversary Edition ハイパーストリートファイターII アニバーサリーエディション
|
2003 |
Hyper Street Fighter II arcade allows players to select any version of Street Fighter II characters, marking the final CP System II release. |
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Virtua Striker 3 バーチャストライカー
|
2001 |
Virtua Striker 3 ntroduces new teams, improved 3D graphics, and expanded match modes. Maintains the series’ arcade-focused gameplay with fast, action-driven soccer, dynamic camera angles, and fluid animations. |
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Street Fighter 6 ストリートファイター6
|
2023 |
Street Fighter 6: Type Arcade, released in December 2023 on NESiCAxLive2, features exclusive Dynamic controls, online play, cross-platform progression, and customizable profiles, with ongoing updates and wide U.S. arcade availability. |
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Chinese Hero チャイニーズヒーロー
|
1984 |
Chinese Hero (チャイニーズヒーロー, Chainīzu Hīrō), also known in Japan as Super Chinese (スーパーチャイニーズ, Sūpā Chainīzu), is an arcade action game developed by Nihon Game (now Culture Brain) and published by Taiyo System in October 1984. |
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Street Fighter: The Movie ストリートファイター ・ザー・ムービー
|
1994 |
Street Fighter: The Movie arcade is a poorly received digitized fighter with unresponsive controls and limited characters, yet it maintains a small ironic competitive scene. |
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Bank Panic バンクパニック
|
1985 |
Shoot bad guys behind the doors, don't shoot the good guys. Try
to collect stolen money back. |
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Street Fighter III: 3rd Strike – Fight for Future ストリートファイターIII 3rd STRIKE
|
1999 |
Street Fighter III: 3rd Strike adds new characters, updates returning fighters, introduces Guard Parry and a Judgement System, and includes single-player challenges with minigames. |
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Ultra Street Fighter IV ウルトラストリートファイターIV
|
2010 |
Ultra Street Fighter IV, released in arcades on April 17, 2014, added new characters, stages, and gameplay refinements, serving as the final arcade iteration of Street Fighter IV. |
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Sengeki Striker 旋激ストライカー
|
1997 |
Sengeki Striker is a Japan-only vertical shoot ’em up where players pilot a ship with multiple auxiliary weapons, chaining enemy kills for high scores. The game combines fast-paced shooting, dynamic explosions, and strategic use of bombs and Gambits. |