Chōgōkin Selections (超合金 セレクションズ) is a CD-ROM-based adventure game for the Playdia console. The title Chōgōkin translates to "Super Alloy", a fictitious material which first appeared in Mazinger Z and is also used as the name of a line die-cast robot toys manufactured by Bandai subsidiary Popy.
Gear Stadium Heisei-ban is a baseball game for the Sega Game Gear. It is an updated version of Gear Stadium with a Nippon Professional Baseball license and the names of real NPB players.
The PlayStation port of the game released exclusively in Japan.
This version of the game was used as a connection to Gogetsuji Legends, an Arcade game released months earlier in Japan.
It added the Tag Battle mode from Legends along with new unlockable characters and transformations only available in the VS and Tag Battle modes.
Unfortunately this version suffers from major slowdowns/freezes when characters transform.
Sougou Kakutougi Rings: Astral Bout 3 is a Shoot/Hybrid fighting game featuring the Shoot fighting league known as RINGS fighting network, developed by A-Wave and published by King Records, it was released in Japan in 1995.
The arcade game "Magical Drop" received an updated version named "Magical Drop Plus 1!" that features aesthetic improvements and also introduces a "Solo Play" mode. Magical Drop Plus 1! was released in North America and Europe as "Chain Reaction"; in this version, the puzzle pieces are changed from spherical Drops to various items (such as food or celestial bodies) and the character-unique voice acting is replaced by a single male narrator.
All versions of the original arcade game were developed for Data East's "MLC" arcade hardware.
The game includes two game modes: the one-player score-based Solo Play (where additional lines of tiles regularly drop from the top of the screen) and two-player competitive Battle Mode (where the second player can be human or CPU opponents). Similar to Tetris Attack, players can make "chain reactions" by quickly creating near-simultaneous matches to either boost their score (in Solo Play) or fill up more of their opponent's playfield (in Battle Mode).
Magical Drop was ported to the
In the year 2110, in the city of Meggagrid, once known as Los Angeles, you meet Dr. Grubert, a very prominent inventor who has been crippled by an explosion perpetrated by a crime family known as The Pitt Family. He gives a suit known as the Helipak Flight Suit to fight back and take down the criminals in the city and apprehend The Pitt Family and bring peace back to the city. With an arsenal of nine different weapons and twenty power-ups, the player flies around seven levels of the city with six degrees of freedom.
With no rules, no limits and no pit stopping, anything goes in this collision course of crumple zones, hit & run mayhem, and street level slamming where wrecking your opponent's motor in ultra-realistic smashes and crashes is the name of the game. Take on the rigors of a full Championship season and pit your wits against a motley crew of psycho-waster racers such as the Suicide Squaddies, Skum and The Optician as you storm up the rankings from Rookie to Pro.
Reckon you can handle it?
Destruction Derby works with a serial link cable for two player head-to-head action.
Magical Shop is an add-on peripheral, which plugs permanently into the Casio Loopy, allowing players to take screen captures at any time and then print them. The device also came with its own in-built editing software, which becomes active when no cartridge is present in the slot. The software is capable of making modifications to prefabricated photos or saved screen captures. The art tools include image cropping, adding text, colors. Objects, and speech bubbles.
WWF WrestleMania (also known on console versions as WWF WrestleMania: The Arcade Game) is a professional wrestling arcade game released by Midway Manufacturing Co. in 1995. It is based on the World Wrestling Federation (WWF) professional wrestling promotion.
The game featured digitized representations of eight WWF performers who are pitted against each other in fast-paced matches inspired by Midway's Mortal Kombat games. Commentary is provided by Vince McMahon and Jerry Lawler, who also appear in the game sitting at the announcers' table to the right of the ring.
Acclaim, who published the console versions of the game, developed a follow-up, WWF in Your House for the PlayStation, Sega Saturn, and DOS.
Panel de Pon: Event Version was an event released on the Super Famicom's Satellaview service. This Event version is notable as it predates the original Panel de Pon by 10 days because its used as one of the ways for consumers to try the game out.