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=>
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Battle Shark バトルシャーク
|
1990 |
No summary. |
|
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Shark Attack シャークアタック
|
1980 |
No summary. |
|
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Blue Shark ブルーシャーク
|
1978 |
Deep sea shooting game |
|
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Shark Jaws シャークジョーズ
|
1975 |
No summary. |
|
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Pool Shark プールシャーク
|
1977 |
Pool. |
|
|
Sky Shark 飛翔鮫
|
1982 |
Vertical shoot 'em up. Original Hi Sho Zame in Japan, licensed to Electrocoin in Europe under the name Flying Shark, and Romstar in North America under the name Sky Shark. |
|
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Flying Shark 飛翔鮫
|
1987 |
Airplane shooting game - ground, sea, and air targets |
|
|
Fire Shark 鮫!鮫!鮫!
|
1989 |
No summary. |
|
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Wave Shark
|
1996 |
No summary. |
|
|
HishouZame (aka Flying Shark)
|
1987 |
No summary. |
|
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Mad Shark
|
1993 |
No summary. |
|
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R-Shark
|
1995 |
No summary. |
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Killer Shark
|
1973 |
Perhaps Sega. Player aims gun at a moving shark to kill it. |
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China Gate 中華大仙?
|
1988 |
You (and optional teamate) choose 1 of 3 characters, battle many different enemies with different abilities, and beat various bosses. The goal is to retrieve a book which the enemies have stolen from your master (as you see in the attract screens). |
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WWF Wrestlefest WWFレッスルフェスト
|
1991 |
Wrestling, not that it's a sport really, just acting. WWF WrestleFest is a wrestling game that is a follow-up to WWF Superstars. One to four players can play in a Tag Team Challenge or the Battle Royal. |
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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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Battle Bird
|
1985 |
Space - destry space fortress |
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Battle of Atlantis バトルオブアトランティス
|
1981 |
No summary. |
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Super Tag Battle
|
1996 |
Also known as: Kizuna Encounter: Super Tag Battle, Fu'un Super Tag Battle (JPN) |
|
|
1943: The Battle of Midway 1943ミッドウェイ海戦
|
1987 |
American planes fly against the might of the Japanese Imperial Navy. |
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Battle Chopper
|
1987 |
No summary. |
|
|
Battle Lane! Vol. 5 バトルレーン
|
1986 |
No summary. |
|
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Battle Rangers
|
1988 |
No summary. |
|
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Battle Star バトルスター
|
1979 |
No summary. |
|
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Battle Wings バトルウィング
|
1984 |
European version of B-Wings? |
|
|
Bega's Battle 幻魔大戦
|
1983 |
No summary. |
|
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Paddle Battle パドルバトル
|
1973 |
No summary. |
|
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Sea Battle
|
1976 |
No summary. |
|
|
G-LOC Air Battle
|
1990 |
Hi-tech follow-up to Afterburner series. |
|
|
Indian Battle インデアンバトル
|
1980 |
No summary. |
|
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Lunar Battle
|
1982 |
No summary. |
|
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Megaman: The Power Battle
|
1994 |
A decent platformer to look at and has
excellent novelty and collectable value but isn't the most fun to play. |
|
|
Space Battle スペースバトル
|
1977 |
No summary. |
|
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Kizuna Encounter Super Tag Battle 風雲スーパータッグバトル
|
1996 |
Kizuna Encounter is a 1996 competitive fighting game produced by SNK for the Neo Geo arcade and home platform. It is the sequel to Savage Reign. |
|
|
Tank Battle
|
0 |
No summary. |
|
|
Battle Arena Toshinden 2 バトルアリーナ闘神伝2
|
1995 |
3D fighting based on Battle Arena Toshinden series on the Sony PlayStation game console. |
|
|
Battle K-Road バトルクロード
|
1994 |
Street Fighter clone. |
|
|
Battle Toads
|
1994 |
Double Dragon-like scrolling co-operative fighting game based on the hit Tradewest NES game. |
|
|
BOTTS (Battle of the Solar System)
|
1992 |
2-pc
cabinet w/seat - mechanized warrior action |
|
|
F-1 Super Battle F-1スーパーバトル
|
1994 |
No summary. |
|
|
Rockman - the Power Battle (Japan) ロックマン
|
1995 |
No summary. |
|
|
Astro Battle
|
1979 |
No summary. |
|
|
Battle Bakraid バトルバクレイド
|
1999 |
No summary. |
|
|
Battle Balls
|
1996 |
No summary. |
|
|
Battle Blaze
|
1992 |
No summary. |
|
|
Battle Circuit
|
1997 |
No summary. |
|
|
Battle Cross
|
1982 |
No summary. |
|
|
Battle Flip Shot
|
1998 |
No summary. |
|
|
Battle Garegga バトルガレッガ
|
1996 |
No summary. |
|
|
Battle Master
|
1991 |
No summary. |
|
|
Battle Road
|
1984 |
No summary. |
|
|
Battle Station
|
1977 |
No summary. |
|
|
Formation Battle in May
|
1999 |
No summary. |
|
|
Guardian 3D Battle Simulator
|
1993 |
No summary. |
|
|
Gunforce - Battle Fire Engulfed Terror Island
|
1991 |
No summary. |
|
|
Magic Great Battle
|
2000 |
No summary. |
|
|
Vs. Battle City
|
1981 |
No summary. |
|
|
BATTLE GEAR バトルギア
|
1999 |
No summary. |
|
|
Gourmet Battle Quiz Ryohrioh CooKing
|
1998 |
No summary. |
|
|
Marvel Vs. Capcom
|
1997 |
The 5th game by Capcom to utilize their insanely popular Xmen fighting game
engine. Players select 2 characters out of a possible 15 (plus 5 hidden)
and battle it out. |
|
|
Killer Instinct
|
1994 |
Ten fighters battle in on-on-one fights in order to face the final boss
Eyedol and win the Ultratech Tournament. |
|
|
R-Type R-Type
|
1987 |
Irem's classic Giger-esque blaster. Battle against the fearsome, unrelenting Bydo Empire.
|
|
|
Tri-Sports
|
1989 |
Power Strike (bowling), Pool shark (billiards), and Mini-golf Deluxe all in one cabinet |
|
|
Eliminator エリミネーター
|
1981 |
A 2- or 4- Player battle frenzy to be the first to destroy the Killer
Bagel (actually a Death Star of sorts). |
|
|
Mario Bros. マリオブラザーズ
|
1983 |
Mario and his brother Luigi must battle even creatures in the sewers. |
|
|
Battlezone バトルゾーン
|
1980 |
Tank combat - destroy tanks, missiles & saucers. Sometimes written "Battle Zone" |
|
|
Outfoxies, The
|
1995 |
A one or two player game in which you choose from a wide variety of characters and battle to the death with your opponent. |
|
|
Street Fighter EX Plus ストリートファイターEXプラス
|
1997 |
Street Fighter EX Plus added all hidden characters from the original EX plus four new fighters, raising the roster to 21 playable characters. |
|
|
Killer Instinct 2
|
1996 |
Ten fighters duke it out in one-on-one battles, in order to reach the
boss, Gargos, and win the Ultratech Tournament. |
|
|
Star Trek スタートレック
|
1983 |
Space battle simulator - destroy the Klingons while protecting the star bases. |
|
|
Qix クイックス
|
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. |
|
|
Super Street Fighter II Turbo スーパーストリートファイターIIX
|
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. |
|
|
Street Fighter Alpha 3 ストリートファイターZERO3
|
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. |
|
|
Ikari Warriors
|
1986 |
Jungle combat with guns and grenades against an army of evildoers. Lots
of powerups and an eight-direction turning joystick/knob to control
you fighter. Plus you get to jump into tanks! A classic two player
reminiscent of Front Line. |
|
|
Attack アタック
|
1977 |
Two player battle - air vs. sea (bomber vs. destroyer) |
|
|
Sea Devil
|
1973 |
Perhaps Sega. Player aims gun at a moving manta ray to kill it. |
|
|
Xybots ザイボット
|
1987 |
Battle evil robots to find goodies and clear the maze.
|
|
|
Street Fighter II' Turbo: Hyper Fighting ストリートファイターII′ ターボ
|
1992 |
Choose from the original eight characters plus new boss characters in a speed-up version of Street Fighter 2: Champion Edition. |
|
|
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. |
|
|
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. |
|
|
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. |
|
|
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. |
|
|
Twin Hawk ツインホーク
|
1989 |
Flying Shark-like WW2 airplane shoot'em-up. |
|
|
Street Fighter II': Champion Edition ストリートファイターII ダッシュ
|
1992 |
Street Fighter II': Champion Edition arcade added playable bosses, mirror matches, and gameplay balance adjustments, enhancing competitive depth while retaining the original format. |
|
|
Alien Syndrome エイリアンシンドローム
|
1987 |
Third-person shooter where you get to blast all kinds of aliens and rescue people. You can also find power-ups for better blasting power!
|
|
|
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. |
|
|
Asterix & Obelix
|
1992 |
A 2 player fighting game like Final Fight, the 2 characters you can choose are Asterix and Obelix. |
|
|
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. |
|
|
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. |
|
|
Karate Champ
|
1984 |
Head to Head Karate, gaming's first complex beat-em-up - beat your opponent senseless |
|
|
Grand Striker グランドストライカー
|
1993 |
Grand Striker (also called Grand Striker Human Cup) is a Japanese arcade soccer game where players advance through five tournament stages to win the Human Cup. The gameplay is fast-paced and accessible, emphasizing fun and straightforward arcade action. |
|
|
Samurai Showdown サムライスピリッツ
|
1993 |
The first in a popular line of fighters in which the combatants wield various weapons. Known as "Samurai Spirits" in Japan. |
|
|
Violence Fight バイオレンスファイト
|
1990 |
Primitive two player fighting game. Two players can duke it out in this 2d fighter similar to Pit Fighter. |
|
|
Pulsar パルサー
|
1981 |
You drive through a maze while strange opponents fire at you. You must vanquish opponents before you move to the next maze. Watch for the maze to change, because as some walls disappear others materialize. |
|
|
Super Mario Bros. スーパーマリオブラザーズ
|
1986 |
Mario and Luigi stamp out the evil Koopas through 8 levels to kill the Koopa King and save the Princess. |
|
|
Tron トロン
|
1982 |
Tron is trapped inside a computer and forced to play games. Tron must destroy the evil MCP (Master Control Program). Based on the movie.
|
|
|
Ataxx アタックス
|
1990 |
A variation on the Othello boardgame. You control either the blue or red
blobs (pieces). You can either jump over one space, or "multiply" to an
adjacent space. Then, all blobs in adjacent spaces change to your color. |
|
|
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 |
|
|
Prehistoric Isle in 1930
|
1989 |
Battle dinosaurs in your Sopwith Camel.
|
|
|
Genshitou 1930's Genshitou 1930's
|
1989 |
Battle dinosaurs in your Sopwith Camel. |
|
|
Wonsido 1930's
|
1989 |
Battle dinosaurs in your Sopwith Camel. |
|
|
Atari Football フットボール
|
1978 |
Black-and-white head-to-head football for two or four players. First arcade game to use a trackball as the controller. |
|
|
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. |
|
|
M.A.C.H. 3
|
1983 |
Flying - Destroy ground and air targets. Has a fighter game and a bomber game. AKA Mach 3, M.A.C.H. III |
|
|
Samurai Showdown 2 真サムライスピリッツ-覇王丸地獄変-
|
1994 |
One or two player fighting game with various weapons. Series known as "Samurai Spirits" in Japan. |
|
|
Samurai Showdown 3: Blades of Blood
|
1995 |
One or two player fighting game with various weapons. Series known as "Samurai Spirits" in Japan. |
|
|
Samurai Showdown 4: Amakusa's Revenge
|
1996 |
One or two player fighting game with various weapons. Series known as "Samurai Spirits" in Japan. |
|
|
Pleiads
|
1981 |
The same play style as Phoenix. Move your ship left and right, and destroy the enemy characters. Several different waves, with the major difference from Phoenix being a wave where you have to land the ship. |
|
|
King of Fighters '95
|
1995 |
Sequel to The King of Fighters 94. This game once again uses characters from SNK's other fighters but this time you can edit you teams to your liking.
|
|
|
Strikers 1945 ストライカーズ1945
|
1995 |
Strikers 1945 is a fast-paced vertical shooter where players pilot WWII-era planes against waves of enemies and bosses, emphasizing skillful shooting, dodging, and strategic power-up use. |
|
|
Borderline ボーダーライン, Bōdārain
|
1981 |
drive Jeep, destroy enemy refineries - four stages with different gameplay - vertical shooter, dig-dug like maze, etc |
|
|
Mortal Kombat モータルコンバット
|
1992 |
Gore-fest head to head fighting. Seven awesome warriors go head to defeat the evil Shang Sung to win back control over the earth and restore peace.
|
|
|
Smash TV
|
1990 |
In the "distant" future of 1999, you are a contestant on the most violent game show of all – Smash TV. On this game show anything goes, as you attempt to collect prizes, cash, and keys by fighting off a host of enemies with your array of weapons. In some versions, if you collect enough keys, you are rewarded with a trip to the Pleasure Dome. |
|
|
Joust ジャウスト
|
1982 |
Who would have thought a game with knights fighting on ostriches and storks could become such a classic? Many people attribute the enormous success of Joust to the fact that it could be played either competitively or collaboratively, making it almost two games in one. |
|
|
Legionnaire
|
1992 |
A run through the city and beat up all the bad giys game in the same vein as games like Final Fight. Judy has been kidnapped by the crime syndicate and Frank, Chris, and Alfred must save her. |
|
|
Run & Gun
|
1993 |
Run and gun is a life-like basketball game with high flying dunks, in your face rejections and much much more. |
|
|
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. |
|
|
Galaga Plus ギャラガプラス
|
1984 |
Distributed game name: GAPLUS OR GALAGA 3... A sequel released by NAMCO of the original Galaga under two different names both released in 1984. |
|
|
9-Ball Shootout
|
1993 |
So, you think you can play pool, huh? Then challenge 9 BALL SHOOTOUT'S Dirty Dozen. |
|
|
Lunar Lander ルナーランダー
|
1979 |
Check it out: Atari’s first vector graphics game. Using a throttle lever and rotation buttons, you attempt to land a manned spacecraft on the moon. Readouts show fuel usage and speed readings which must be coordinated for a successful landing. |
|
|
Trog
|
1990 |
Trog is a 1 to 4 player Pacman style game. Each player controls a
dinosaur who must move around the island collecting their colored eggs and then making it back home first. There are 51 different levels.
|
|
|
Chain Reaction
|
1985 |
Known as Magical Drop outside of North America. |
|
|
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. |
|
|
Strikers 1945 Plus ストライカーズ 1945 PLUS
|
2000 |
Strikers 1945 Plus is a vertical shooter combining classic arcade action with enhanced visuals, multiple planes, and fast-paced, skill-based combat. |
|
|
Print Club 2
|
1997 |
A classic photo booth that can be reconfigured to print stickers. Has two verified styles of printers and can print one, four or sixteen pictures to a page in beautiful photo-quality images. Has overlays that are applied to the frame of the image. |
|
|
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. |
|
|
Hustle ハッスル
|
1977 |
Box your opponent in while collecting as many bonus boxes as possible. |
|
|
War Gods ウォーゴッド
|
1996 |
3-D Fighting Game. Play as a wide variety of Gods and Deities with
Special Powers and Moves. |
|
|
Chase H.Q. 2
|
1990 |
police chasing baddies and running them off the road. Just like C-HQ1 except you had a man jump out of the sun roof and fired a machine gun when you pressed a button. |
|
|
Three Wonders スリーワンダー
|
1991 |
Three different games from varying genres. Midnight Wanderers is a side-scrolling platform game, Chariot is a side-scrolling shooter, and Don't Pull is a maze/block game. All have very colorful graphics.
|
|
|
Bone Crusher
|
1985 |
Battle enemies on moving trucks |
|
|
Wings
|
1976 |
Two player head-to-head air combat |