Giga Pets Explorer is a plug-and-play game released by Hasbro in 2006. Handheld pets could be zapped into the device to explore the 9 areas of Giga Island, collect items, and complete missions.
A plug-and-play console designed to capitalize on the boom of games like Guitar Hero and Rock Band, manufactured and released sometime in 2009. It contains licensed MIDI versions of various rock songs like 'Dream Police' (Cheap Trick) and 'Thriller' (Fall Out Boy), and four modes from which to play them in. It has garnered a reputation for being a rather poor representation of the 'guitar game' subtype, often pointing to the lackluster covers and low production quality.
"Kenshin Dragon Quest: Yomigaerishi Densetsu no Tsurugi" is an experience game of the Dragon Quest series released in 2003.
It is a standalone game console using XaviX technology.
The content is an arrangement of the story of the first Dragon Quest, and you use a special Loto sword-shaped controller to slash your enemies.
"Excite Bowling" is an experience game released by Epoch in 2002. It was released as one of the "experimental games" (Taikan game) series. It is a hardware-integrated plug-and-play game that uses XaviX technology. Later, "XaviX Bowling", which can be said to be the successor software, was released on "XaviXPORT", a hardware dedicated to XaviX technology.
Star Wars: Saga Edition: Lightsaber Battle Game is a plug'n'play game released in 2005, shortly after Star Wars: Episode III Revenge of the Sith. It lets the player use a wireless lightsaber to "defeat" enemies from the Star Wars saga. The game claims to be from the point of view of a Jedi the player names, but most of the events occurred to Jedi Obi-Wan Kenobi.
Enter a great big world of LITTLEST PET SHOP adventures with this TV plug-in game that you plug in to and play on your TV! Adopt and save up to 15 pets at the The Little Lovin' Pet Playhouse! Mix and match ingredients to make them tasty treats! Is your pet feeling icky? Stop by the Get Better Center for a little TLC! Take your pets to the WHIRL AROUND PLAYGROUND to romp and play games with other pets. And when it's time to primp your on-screen pals, take them to the Purr-fection Salon for a bath, a haircut and even take pictures for your album! It's the purr-fect place to make all of your pet-lovin' dreams come true! Includes game controller, exclusive owl pet and instructions.
Get off the couch and onto the slopes with this cool Play TV SSX Snowboarder set. Just plug the unit into your TV or VCR and hop on the board for some real snowboarding action. Your moves on the snowboard control the action as you cruise SSX courses and perform heart-stopping tricks as you become one of your favorite SSX characters. You can almost feel the powder as you watch and hear the realistic graphics and sounds on the screen.
System 10 is a home video game machine released by Epoch in 1978. Developed jointly with NEC and equipped with NEC's µPD770C chip. It has 10 built-in games, and you can play ponclone games such as tennis, ping-pong, and soccer, as well as shooting games using a gun-shaped controller. It is an early home-use game machine classified as the first generation. Later, a cheaper version of "System 10 M2" was also released. There is also an OEM model called "Toshiba Video Game TVG-610" which uses the same IC and has the same content developed by Epoch and released by Toshiba.
"TV Vader" is an arrangement of Taito's "Space Invaders" released by Epoch as a home video game in 1980. It is an early video game machine classified as the first generation. 8 horizontal x 6 rows of invaders appear, but due to performance limitations, only the front row invaders are displayed. Although it was a low-performance game machine, it successfully reproduced the atmosphere of Space Invaders. In 1982, it was ported to Cassette Vision under the name "Battle Vader".
A virtual pet game where you must raise one of three puppies, likely released amidst the Nintendogs craze. A Chinese-language version was released as a Nanjing cartridge, which contains a battery to save progress; an English version was included on several plug & plays, but it cannot save progress.
An original Pokémon-themed game, somewhat similar to Breakout. The player controls Pikachu, who must throw balls upward to hit the numbered blocks; the numbers dictate the amount of hits needed. The blocks will shift downward if not destroyed; the game is over if the blocks reach the bottom of the screen.
Direct clone of Cube Technology's 8-bit ping pong game, with the same options ("Knocks Exercise" and "Smash Exercise") and even the same song (Robert Miles' "Fable") on the title screen.