Verne World is a role-playing game exclusively released in Japan. The game revolves around the main character being trapped in a theme park based around the works of Jules Verne such as 'A Journey to the Center of the Earth' and 'Twenty Thousand Leagues Under the Sea'.
Dragon Ball Z: Super Goku-den: Kakusei-hen is the second and last video game of the Super Goku-den series. It was released only in Japan on September 22, 1995, for the Super Nintendo.
An educational shogi game for the Super Famicom endorsed by Asahi Shimbun, one of Japan's major national newspapers and Katou Hifumi, a professional 9th Dan player.
Shin Togenkyo ("New Togenkyo", where Togenkyo refers to a mythical garden from Japanese folklore) is a game from that offers players advice and fortune telling by taking some personal details and divining various predictions from that input. The game is heavily reliant on Japanese script, and offers little in the way of visuals besides the occasional icon used to represent the player's status. It also offers a rudimentary slot machine for players to try their luck in a different manner.
In the future Crystal Tokyo, a small band of discontent citizens have come together to form an rebel team of Senshi called the Oppositio Senshi, who feel that the Sailor Senshi and the Silver Crystal are the source of all of Earth's past battles. Together with a mysterious woman named Apsu, they desire to twist time and change the destiny of the Earth.
In the present day, the Sailor Senshi are enjoying peace now that the Death Busters have been defeated. However, strange things begin happening in the city. Previously defeated Daimons, Droids and Youma appear throughout the city. A visit by Ryo Urawa reveals a cryptic statement that the past and future are being replaced. Rei sees strange apparitions in the fire, and then the four Inner Senshi, along with Chibiusa go missing. Sailor Moon meets up with Uranus, Neptune, and Saturn to go look for the missing Senshi.
Human Grand Prix IV: F1 Dream Battle is a Formula 1 licensed game from Human Entertainment and the fourth game in their Human Grand Prix/F1 Pole Position series. It would be the last Human Grand Prix game to be released on Super Famicom: the fifth and final game in the series, F1 Pole Position 64, was instead a 1997 N64 game.
Similar to the third game in the franchise, this game never saw release outside of Japan but did have all in game text in English. It also features the real teams and drivers of the 1995 F1 season, as well as a number of the official F1 courses.
A Donald Duck licensed platformer released in 1995 for the Super Famicom.
Donald gets transported into a world of dreams through the use of a Magic Cap, and must stop the evil Magician Pete to save this unknown land.
Super Power League 3 is the third Power League game to be released on the Super Famicom and the ninth overall. The series is once again endorsed by Fuji Television, after the second game went with a different sponsor, with play-by-play commentary from Kenji Fukui, an announcer from that network.
It features the standard gameplay modes: A single Open game, a multi-game Pennant mode, an All-Stars mode with special teams, a Home Run Derby mode (named "Race"), and an opportunity to watch a match between two CPU teams.
The Power League series would see one more Super Famicom sequel in 1996 (Super Power League 4) before the series moved onto the next generation of consoles.