Tricolore Crise (which is read as the English word "crisis") is a Japan-only Dreamcast RPG developed by HuneX, a prolific developer of visual novels as well as the Blue Breaker series.
Boasting an ATB-influenced battle system and a slew of mostly optional story events loosely set to a calendar, this open-ended fantasy tale in the vein of the early Atelier games tasks the player with guiding a newly formed team of three young women through the examination process that will test whether they are worthy to become masters of one of many magical towers that protect human civilisation from the threat of the Iblis, a savage, menacing, and mysterious race of magical monsters.
The player may only control one of the three protagonists at any given time, but may switch freely between them, with certain events only being accessible to certain characters. The three may also each be accompanied in their quest by up to two Mitsukai, or "Angels". These guardian spirits can be freely altered and developed by the player, giving th
Netto de Tennis is a tennis budget title released for the Dreamcast exclusively in Japan. It shares many similarities to Smash Stars, the tennis portion of the game Capcom Sports Club.
A collection of five classic arcade games designed by Yu Suzuki released for the Sega Dreamcast in 2001.
It includes:
After Burner II (1987)
Hang-On (1985)
OutRun (1986)
Power Drift (1988)
Space Harrier (1985)
There was never a volume 2.
Kiteretsu Boy's Gangagan is a game for the Sega Dreamcast only released in Japan.
Players can use the Dreamcast Microphone to give voice commands in-game.
Midway's Greatest Arcade Hits: Volume 1 for Dreamcast contains the four Williams-produced games Defender, Joust, Robotron: 2084, and Sinistar plus the two extra games: Bubbles and Defender II (Stargate).
It was also released for Nintendo 64 with the games Spy Hunter and Root Beer Tapper (Tapper) instead of Bubbles and Defender II (Stargate).
Sega Worldwide Soccer is a series of soccer games by Sega for initially for the Sega Saturn but later was moved to the Dreamcast. They were released between 1995 and the year 2000.
NCAA College Football 2K2: Road to the Rose Bowl is an American football video game developed by Visual Concepts in association with 2K Sports. It was released in 2001 for only the Sega Dreamcast. The cover athlete is former Purdue standout quarterback Drew Brees.
One of the few golf games for the DC, with a cartoony style. Contains arcade mode, tournaments, five different courses and 15 characters (11 unlockable). Lots of different equipment (balls and clubs mostly) and even a futuristic cyber mini golf game are thrown in.
The sequel to Demolition Racer. Race 14 tortuous tracks with mines and crates all over the place slowing you down, racing over 16 savage cars to a sports car to a hearse with its own characteristics to win the race. New game mode "last man standing" where you face all cars in race not for position, but to wreck each other going down a track to see who's last, and "demolition derby" where you fight cars in a arena to see who's last by hitting each other with state-of-the-art graphics where you can see tires, doors, hoods, bumpers, etc. go everywhere.
There is a new girl in the Hinata Sou. Her name is Fujisawa Mizuho and she is a Tokyo University Student. She is asked by Keitarou-kun's grandmother to become a tutor for Keitarou-kun. If Keitarou-kun fail to pass the coming Entrance Exam for Tokyo University, Mizuho-chan says that she will take the responsibility for it and marry Keitarou-kun.
Pro Pinball Trilogy collects together three games from the Pro Pinball series on one disc for the Dreamcast. It includes Pro Pinball: Timeshock!, Pro Pinball: Big Race USA and Pro Pinball: Fantastic Journey
Speed Devils: Online Racing is an updated version of Speed Devils that reuses the tracks and cars from the original game, adds new ones, and puts them into completely new modes with a focus on online multiplayer.
The game includes online and offline options. Offline functions as a practice mode for online, and has only two modes: Arcade (for a standard race against AI-controlled opponents) and Ghost (for a one-on-one against oneself). At the start, car selection is limited and further cars can only be unlocked by playing online.
The meat of the game is in Online mode. After customizing their online persona, players start with $10.000, enough to buy a car of the lowest class. Money must be earned by racing, enabling players to buy new cars and tune them with new parts. There are three kinds of races: Standard, Trial and Vendetta.
Standard races allow various ways of earning money, of which winning is only one: breaking speed limits at certain points and setting race records (highest speed, fastest lap time, leadi
Toy Racer is a racing game that's an extension of Toy Commander racing sections, designed exclusively for both offline and online multiplayer modes for up to four players. As a result, there is no possibility to play against AI controlled players, being the only single player features of the game both a Practice and a Time Attack modes.
Looking for high-speed authentic arcade action? Strap yourself firmly in for this electrifying new racing game. Extensive game features include over twenty world-class racing vehicles including hidden cars, fifteen challenging tracks with varying weather conditions in five different universes, spectacular car jumps with additional boosters on the track, stunning visual SFX on the landscapes and multiplayer gaming for up to four players.
The legend lives on in 2001 with a new member in the Fire Pro family. Arguably the most respected wrestling franchise in Japan, Fire Pro revives itself after Human's (the original publisher) demise. The new features include the availability of objects to use as weapons inside and outside of the ring, an online network option, and support for up to eight players simultaneously over the net.