Jurassic Park is a rail shooter arcade game developed and released by Sega in 1994. It is based on the 1993 film of the same name. The game cabinet resembles the rear of the Ford Explorer tour vehicles used in the film. The player, equipped with a joystick, must shoot dinosaurs that appear on-screen throughout the game.
The game is notable for having a moving seat, also used in Sega's previous 1991 light gun shooter Rail Chase. The seat is powered by hydraulic pistons to move the seat according to action on the screen. The game's graphics blend two-dimensional sprites and three-dimensional polygons to give the sense of movement. Jurassic Park was the first game of this genre to include 3D environments.
Crime Fighters is a side-scrolling beat-em-up released by Konami for the arcades in 1989. take control of a squad of undercover police officers and rescue a group of kidnapped damsels from a crime boss and his army of punks!
Star Wars: Battle Pod is a experiential arcade game that features a dome-shaped screen, transporting players into heated battles in a galaxy far, far away.
In iconic locations like the Death Star, players will be able to take control of some of the most memorable vehicles and moments in the Star Wars universe and pilot them to victory.
A first-person arcade racing game released by Kasco in 1969. It was an electro-mechanical game using a form of video projection to display a racing track on a screen. It was a precursor to first-person racing video games.
HyperBowl scores just like conventional bowling, but the style of play is entirely unique. In this virtual bowling game, you can steer the ball all the way to the pins!
Sound too easy? Not really -- you must dodge trolley cars in San Francisco 2099, leap buses on the streets of Tokyo, navigate across a pitching ship on the High Seas, and avoid whatever other obstacles are thrown your way.
Players seeking more predictable play can always fine tune their skills in a Classic bowling alley or bowl through a peaceful Yosemite forest.
Planet Harriers is a seated twin arcade cabinet in the Space Harrier franchise. Like its 1985 predecessor Space Harrier, Planet Harriers had the most technically advanced graphics of 2000, running on the Sega Hikaru arcade system board, which was very powerful (but very expensive) for its time.
F&F Super Bikes is a spin-off of The Fast and The Furious arcade game. Since this game is about motorcycle races, it uses a different cabinet, with a replica of a byke's body, like most motorcycle based arcade games.
Pop'n Music Animelo 2 (Pop'n Music アニメロ2) is a rhythm video game developed by Konami and released on Arcade platforms in 2001 in Japan. It is a spinoff entry in the Pop'n Music series. Unlike the previous Animelo entry, the game didn't have a console release.
Pop'n Music Animelo (Pop'n Music アニメロ) is a rhythm video game developed by Konami and released on Arcade platforms in March 2000 in Japan. The game was later released on PlayStation under the name Pop'n Music: Animation Melody in July 2000 in Japan. It is a spinoff entry in the Pop'n Music series.
Silver Strike Bowling is an arcade game that mimics ten-pin bowling on a monitor corresponding to a player's trackball control. Users may play standard bowling games or, depending on local availability, can select the Vegas Tournament option allowing players to draw cards for each spare and strike in an attempt to produce the best poker hand. While relatively basic, the 8 players mode and leaderboards can keep players coming back for more.
House of the Dead EX is a spin-off of the series and takes more of a comedy approach to the Sega franchise. A light-gun shooter at heart, players will also take part in minigames to progress through this wacky zombie-love story.
An arcade-exclusive compilation featuring four classic Namco games: Galaga, Xevious, Super Xevious and Mappy. It also adds brand-new "Arrangement" versions with updated graphics, audio and gameplay.
Played with a plastic, motion-sensitive Katana Controller, this first-person hack & slash game put players into the role of a Samurai, with zombie enemies to slash in every direction.
Sega's first "video" arcade game. Unlike their earlier amusement games, it uses discrete logic as opposed to being electro-mechanical. The game used boards imported from the United States mounted in a Sega-produced cabinet.