=>
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Landing High Japan
|
1999 |
No summary. |
|
Top Landing
|
1988 |
No summary. |
|
Midnight Landing
|
1987 |
No summary. |
|
Landing Gear ランディングギア
|
1995 |
No summary. |
|
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. |
|
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. |
|
High Impact Football
|
1990 |
No summary. |
|
Super High Impact Football
|
1991 |
No summary. |
|
High Voltage
|
1985 |
No summary. |
|
High Way Race
|
1983 |
No summary. |
|
Ojanko High School
|
1988 |
No summary. |
|
Riviera High Score
|
1987 |
No summary. |
|
Skier's High
|
0 |
Konami |
|
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. |
|
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. |
|
All Japan Prowrestl
|
1997 |
No summary. |
|
Capcom Golf (Japan) カプコンゴルフ
|
1991 |
No summary. |
|
Quiz Capcom World 2 (Japan onl
|
1992 |
No summary. |
|
Quiz Game (Japan Only)
|
0 |
No summary. |
|
Quiz Ghost Hunters (Japan Only)
|
0 |
No summary. |
|
Rockman - the Power Battle (Japan) ロックマン
|
1995 |
No summary. |
|
Sangoku (Japan) 三国志
|
1991 |
No summary. |
|
Tonosama 2 (Japan Only)
|
0 |
No summary. |
|
Whoopee (Japan) / Pipi & Bibis (World)
|
1991 |
No summary. |
|
All Japan Prowrestling 全日本プロレス featuring Virtua
|
1997 |
No summary. |
|
Vampire Hunter (Japan - Dark Stalkers) バンパイアハンター
|
1995 |
No summary. |
|
Varth: Operation Thunderstorm (Japan) バース
|
1992 |
No summary. |
|
Quiz Capcom World 2 (Japan only) カプコンワールド2
|
1992 |
No summary. |
|
Dokaben 2 (Japan) ドカベン2
|
1989 |
No summary. |
|
Lost World (Japan) ロストワールド
|
1988 |
No summary. |
|
Ikari Warriors (Japan) 怒 IKARI
|
0 |
No summary. |
|
Dogou Souken (Victory Road - Japan) 怒号層圏
|
0 |
No summary. |
|
Virtua Striker 4 バーチャストライカー
|
2004 |
Virtua Striker 4 is the fourth in the main series. It modernized visuals and smoother animations combined with additional game modes and refined mechanics. Continues the series’ focus on high-speed arcade soccer and dramatic plays rather than realistic simulation. |
|
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. |
|
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. |
|
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. |
|
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. |
|
Strikers 1945 III ストライカーズ1999
|
1999 |
Strikers 1945 III is a modernized vertical shooter with advanced planes, complex bullet patterns, and high-intensity arcade action requiring skill, strategy, and precise timing. |
|
Grand Striker 2 グランドストライカー2
|
1996 |
Grand Striker 2 is a Japan-only arcade soccer game featuring faster gameplay, improved graphics, and a wider selection of teams compared to its predecessor. |
|
Run & Gun
|
1993 |
Run and gun is a life-like basketball game with high flying dunks, in your face rejections and much much more. |
|
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. |
|
Snow Bros. 2: With New Elves
|
1994 |
Same as Snow Bros. but with 3 added characters. Known in Japan as Otenki Paradise: Snow Bros. 2 |
|
Strikers 1945 2 ストライカーズ1945II
|
1997 |
Strikers 1945 II is an intensified vertical shooter featuring diverse planes, complex enemy patterns, and upgraded visuals, requiring precision, strategy, and quick reflexes. |
|
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. |
|
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. |
|
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. |
|
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. |
|
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. |
|
Cloud 9
|
1983 |
Shoot raining clouds before water level gets too high. |
|
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. |
|
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. |
|
Ring King リングキング
|
1985 |
King of Boxer is called Ring King outside of Japan and PAL regions. |
|
King of Boxer キングオブボクサー
|
1985 |
King of Boxer is called Ring King outside of Japan and PAL regions. |
|
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. |
|
Street Fighter EX ストリートファイターEX
|
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. |
|
Virtua Striker バーチャストライカー
|
1994 |
Virtua Striker is a soccer game featuring fast-paced, 3D polygonal gameplay, emphasizing speed, action, and dramatic plays over realism. |
|
Big Striker ビッグストライカー
|
1992 |
Big Striker is a soccer game with an isometric view, eight teams, and dynamic weather effects. Players use a three-button control scheme for passing, shooting, and feints, emphasizing fast-paced, strategic arcade play. |
|
Zintrick
|
1996 |
Known as Oshidashi Zentrix in Japan. A game like Puyo Puyo |
|
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. |
|
Virtua Striker 2 Version 2000
|
1999 |
Update to Virtual Striker 2. Updated team rosters and player statistics, refined gameplay mechanics, and new animations for more fluid matches. Emphasizes speed, arcade intensity, and counterattack opportunities while keeping controls simple. |
|
Lost World, The
|
1997 |
Based on the film "The Lost World" with high detailed dinosaurs. |
|
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. |
|
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.
|
|
Zunzunkyou No Yabou ずんずん教の野望(港技研)
|
1994 |
Japan only, "Zunzunkyou's Ambition" or Ambitious of ZunZun |
|
New Dyna Blaster: Global Quest
|
1992 |
Follow-up to Irem's 1991 game Dynablaster (known as bomberman
in Japan). |
|
Gradius II: Vulcan Venture
|
1988 |
Called Gradius II in Japan, Vulcan Venture in the West. |
|
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. |
|
Virtua Striker 2 バーチャストライカー2
|
1997 |
Virtua Striker 2 is an arcade soccer game with enhanced 3D graphics, fluid animations, and faster matches, combining simple controls with smarter AI and strategic play. |
|
Elevator Action エレベーターアクション
|
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. |
|
Night Striker ナイトストライカー
|
1989 |
Night Striker is a rail shooter where players drive a gun-equipped car through enemy-filled streets, using fast-paced shooting and dodging to progress and score points. |
|
Operation Thunder Hurricane
|
1997 |
High Caliber Machine Gun War Simulation |
|
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. |
|
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. |
|
Kingdom Grand Prix
|
1994 |
Kingdom Grand Prix is a scrolling shooter/racing hybrid arcade game developed by Raizing and published by Eighting. It was later ported to the Sega Saturn. It is the second entry in the Mahou Daisakusen series, but the first to be a shooter/racing hybrid. |
|
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. |
|
Legend of Kage, The
|
1985 |
Action/Adventure game set in ancient feudal 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. |
|
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. |
|
Shinobi 忍
|
1987 |
You play a ninja on a one man mission out to destroy a evil force and
save kidnapped hostages. |
|
Cyberball サイバーボール
|
1989 |
mc68000p8 processor (3) on main board. multiple board set
|
|
Atari Basketball バスケットボール
|
1979 |
One-on-one basketball. Also called Atari Basketball. |
|
Virtua Striker 3 ver. 2002 バーチャストライカー
|
2002 |
Minor update to Virtua Striker 3 with roster revisions, small gameplay adjustments, and optimized graphics. Keeps the emphasis on fast, exciting arcade matches. |
|
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. |
|
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. |
|
Raiden Fighters II: Operation Hell Dive
|
1997 |
One of the best vertical scrolling shooters yet. Great music, spectacular sound effects, and tons of multi-layer parallax, bright, vivid colors, and huge detailed bosses make this game a keeper. |
|
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. |
|
Space Invaders Deluxe スペースインベーダーデラックス
|
1979 |
Space - stop the aliens from landing (again) |
|
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. |
|
Balance Try バランストライ
|
1998 |
Japan only, balance on a white board |
|
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. |
|
Gauntlet II ガントレット2
|
1986 |
Sequel to Gauntlet. Multiplayer (up to 4) exploration/shooting game with RPG elements. More varied monsters/walls/items and higher difficulty than its predecessor.
|
|
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 |
|
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. |
|
Rip Off リップオフ
|
1979 |
A cooperative two-player game in which you and your teammate try to protect fuel pods from the enemy tanks.
|
|
Street Fighter III: 2nd Impact – Giant Attack ストリートファイターIII 2nd IMPACT -GIANT ATTACK-
|
1998 |
Street Fighter III: 2nd Impact adds new characters, separates Yun and Yang, introduces EX Specials, tech throws, Personal Actions, updated mechanics, and single-player rivals with bonus rounds like “Parry the Ball.” |
|
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. |
|
Neo Bomber Man
|
1997 |
The arcade released Neo*Geo version of Bomberman. Similiar to the other
versions. Also released for the Neo*Geo home cart system. |
|
Street Fighter II': Champion Edition (Red Wave)
|
1992 |
Red Wave is an unofficial arcade modification of Street Fighter II': Champion Edition that adds mid-air special moves, limits multiple projectiles, and became popular in regions with limited official updates. |
|
Moon Alien-Part 2
|
1980 |
This game is very similar to Galaxian, except that there is now an energy meter at the bottom that decrements with time. If you do not destroy all the aliens before this meter empties, your ship is destroyed.
|
|
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. |
|
NBA Maximum Hangtime
|
1996 |
Action-oriented basketball featuring real NBA player faces and spectacular
dunks. |
|
Chain Reaction
|
1985 |
Known as Magical Drop outside of North America. |
|
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. |
|
Metro Cross
|
1985 |
You control a runner in a series of timed races. You must run to the end of the hall before time runs out.
|
|
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: 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. |
|
Street Fighter EX2 ストリートファイターEX2
|
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. |
|
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. |
|
King of Fighters '94
|
1994 |
The first in a series of fighting games using a mixture of characters from SNK's other 2 series Fatal Fury and The Art of Fighting.
|
|
Final Starforce ファイナルスターフォース
|
1992 |
Pilot your spaceship, shooting enemy spacecraft and ground targets. Grab the pulsator capsules for extra fire power. |
|
Thayer's Quest
|
1984 |
Search for the Ancient Five Relics to stop the Evil Wizard who wants to take over the land.
|
|
Bucky O'Hare バッキーオハラのスチャラカ空中戦
|
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. |
|
Galaxy Game
|
1971 |
Early Space War coin operated video game, released two months before Computer Space at Stanford. |
|
Steel Gunner 2 スティールガンナー2
|
1991 |
As part of of a male/female police force you must follow and destroy aliens to save the city.
|
|
Darius ダライアス
|
1986 |
Multiple-monitor game. Scrolls from Left to Right for most of the game,
except when choosing the next level to go to, which scrolls Up and Down.
Can gain power-ups along the way for stronger Bombs and (laser?) Shots.. |