Sailor Moon (or Bishoujo Senshi Sailor Moon) is a beat 'em up video game developed by Angel in 1993, and ported to the Super Nintendo Entertainment System. It was localized in Europe exclusively in French in 1994. The Mega Drive version was developed and published by Ma-Ba, although certain elements were recycled from the Super NES version.
Mario & Wario is a puzzle game that is compatible with the SNES Mouse. The player chooses Princess Peach, Mario or Yoshi, and Wario proceeds to drop a bucket on their head (the object changes in later levels). The player controls Wanda the fairy to guide the now-blinded character through an obstacle course, to reach Luigi waiting at the end.
Jurassic Park is a SEGA Genesis/Mega Drive game based on the first movie.
The game was playable as either Dr. Alan Grant or a Velociraptor (presumably the The Big One). Grant is the default character but can be changed using the 'Player' option on the game's main menu to swich to the raptor.
Arcus I-II-III (アークス I・II・III) is a first-person dungeon RPG released exclusively for the Sega Mega-CD Japan. It combines the first three games in Wolf Team's Arcus series; Arcus, Arcus II: Silent Symphony and Arcus III, originally released for Japanese computers between 1988 and 1991.
Nazo Puyo (なぞぷよ) is a 1993 game for the Sega Game Gear by Compile spinning off Puyo Puyo. It was released exclusively in bundles with specially marked Game Gears in Japan (hence its price tag) and would go on to receive two sequels on the Game Gear (the latter receiving two sequels on the Super Nintendo Entertainment System) and many PC-98 games (one retail, the others as part of the DiscStation series) and would be retooled as the Puzzle Mode of the 8-bit version of Dr. Robotnik's Mean Bean Machine.
Winky's girlfriend, Kiki, has suddenly disappeared. When Winky learns that Kiki is imprisoned in the Amusement Park Crazyland, he decides to free her. When entering the park, Winky senses that something is quite rotten.
In order to find Kiki, he has to cross the entire park, which means he has to ride a roller coaster and use his fire balls and other useful tools to eliminate the hostile comic figures that stand in his way.
Enter the exciting world of trolls and enjoy the attraction of your life in this totally crazy Crazyland adventure on NES!
The game is a rebranding of Doki! Doki! Yuuenchi: Crazy Land Daisakusen.
Pyramid Patrol is a very traditional FMV-based rail shooter. The player's ship and small enemies are sprites, while the stages are presented using full-screen FMV stored as laserdisc video. Pyramid Intruder, the 3DO port, improves on the original game by switching from a first-person perspective to a behind-the-ship view in order to make it possible to dodge enemies; it also adds new realtime 3D levels in between the original levels.
Who is this Socket and where is he going so fast? He's a duck with an attitude, and he's taking himself and his electric cord toil anywhere he needs to be. Socket is one bad duck. He's so fast that he can turn out the lights and get out of the room before it gets dark! He's got more alternating current than the electric company and more moves than Air-What's-His-Name.
Plug into Socket for a little AC buzz and some fast times!
The completely overhauled Mega Drive version of Dune, including new graphics, new features, new levels, technology tree changes and streamlined controls.
This legendary Looney Tunes duo make their video game debut - and what a performance! The eyepopping, cartoon like animation and ribtickling shenanigans seem never ending as you twy, twy, twy and twy again to swipe the little Tweety - with cat-astrophic results!
Chitty Chitty Train is a puzzle game about coordinating trains. Guide your train to pick up all passengers and reach the exit without colliding with other trains or obstacles. The game also contains a level editor to modify levels.
Momotaro Dengeki: Momotaro Thunderbolt is an platformer, published by Hudson, which was released in Japan in 1993. It follows the famous Japanese folklore of Momotaro the peach boy.
This third-person racing game resembles Gremlin's earlier Lotus series, in terms of its general look and feel, right down to the text font used in the game. Your task is to race through 16 countries, each of which features four races, with many real-world circuits recreated in incongruous locations (such as the Monza layout in Ayers Rock, and the old Hockenheim in Vancouver).
These four-race blocks each represent their own mini-championship, in which you race against 19 cars, needing to finish in the top 10 to continue, and with the top 6 scoring points 10-6-4-3-2-1, and the respective amount of money in thousands. This can be spent on various upgrades, ranging from engine to tires (wet and dry) and from shocks (front, side and rear) to gearboxes. The ideal approach is to buy the more expensive versions ASAP, as you get no saving when upgrading. If you win the four-race championship, you get the next password.
You get a set amount of nitro boost to use during each race, although bonus nitros, money and instant sp