Educational software released in Japan on the Family Computer with a custom cartridge that needs the Konami QTài, Q太, adapter to function.
1 of 7 games known to use the adapter.
Ordered by Idemitsu and designed to encourage/help teach gas station employees the information needed to obtain Type-C dangerous goods handler qualifications.
Educational software released in Japan on the Family Computer with a custom cartridge that needs the Konami QTài, Q太, adapter to function.
1 of 7 games known to use the adapter.
It is supposed to be used alongside a textbook to answer the questions given in parts of the game.
Educational software released in Japan on the Family Computer with a custom cartridge that needs the Konami QTài, Q太, adapter to function.
1 of 7 games known to use the adapter.
It is supposed to be used alongside a textbook to answer the questions given in parts of the game.
Educational software released in Japan on the Family Computer with a custom cartridge that needs the Konami QTài, Q太, adapter to function.
1 of 7 games known to use the adapter.
It is supposed to be used alongside a textbook to answer the questions given in parts of the game.
Educational software released in Japan on the Family Computer with a custom cartridge that needs the Konami QTài, Q太, adapter to function.
1 of 7 games known to use the adapter.
It is supposed to be used alongside a textbook to answer the questions given in parts of the game.
Educational software released in Japan on the Family Computer with a custom cartridge that requires a Konami QTài, Q太, adapter to function.
1 of 7 games known to use the adapter.
It is supposed to be used alongside a textbook to answer the questions given in parts of the game.
Educational software released in Japan on the Family Computer with a custom cartridge that requires a Konami QTài, Q太, adapter to function.
1 of 7 games known to use the adapter.
It is supposed to be used alongside a textbook to answer the questions given in parts of the game.
The legendary Schmilblick guessing game is back. Have fun guessing the mystery objects: animals, cities, vegetables, sports, movies, TV series ... there is something for everyone. Close to the riddles of "what am I?" or the "who am I?", the universal principle is to guess what lies behind an image or its clues.
Wheel of Fortune was the first game based on the TV game show for the NES. It was developed by Rare and released on the same month as their NES Jeopardy! adaptation. Rare would follow it up with two more NES adaptations of the show: Wheel of Fortune: Junior Edition and Wheel of Fortune: Family Edition.
It follows the rules of the show, where people spin a wheel and then try to solve a hangman puzzle, either guessing a consonant or spending their reward money to buy a vowel. Up to three human players can play via a pass-and-play system. Players must input their answers within a time limit using the in-game text parser.
Wheel of Fortune is based on the popular game show produced by Merv Griffin. The goal is the same as the game show, which is to guess missing letters to solve a puzzle which covers the same subjects as found on the show, such as place, person, thing, phrase, etc. Like the game show, the players spin the wheel, select consonants, buy vowels and hopefully, solve the mystery phrase. The wheel can be "spun" at different strengths by sliding a bar across a selector, and the chances of earning a free spin, losing a turn, and going bankrupt remain.
Tokimemo Private Collection is a quiz game released in 1996. Alongside the quiz section in which you are asked questions by one of the students, it features a gallery including animated pictures of the series' stars complete with blushing cheeks and speech, a media section where you can watch the PC Engine intro plus an audio section where you can hear the Tokimeki tunes to practice for karaoke.
Welcome to the world’s most charming crossword game! Join a colorful cast of characters on their journey across exciting vistas such as tropical islands, lush forests, and explosive volcanoes! Work your way through brand new game modes and challenging levels. It’s a game that’s easy to learn, but difficult to master.
Tokimeki no Houkago is a spin-off game of the original Tokimeki Memorial. It was released for PlayStation on July 16, 1998 (was labeled by PSOne Books on September 18, 2003) and the PlayStation Network on February 24, 2010 in Japan.
Word Land - Crosswords is a word game in which you have to interconnect letters to form words. Once all the words are completed you go to the next level.