The second of three Super Famicom wrestling games based on the Shin Nippon Pro Wrestling (a.k.a. the New Japan Pro Wrestling, or NJPW) circuit by Varie.
Super Kyuukyoku Harikiri Stadium 2 is a Sports game, developed by Now Production and published by Taito Corporation, which was released in Japan in 1994.
Match-3 Super Famicom puzzle game published by Takara in 1994. Features a story mode where the player has to wear down the health bars of various monsters by creating combos.
Super Power League 2 is a baseball game from Hudson Soft and part of their multi-platform Power League series. It is the second of four games made exclusively for the Super Famicom, all of which have the "Super" prefix.
The five Super Power League games were all licensed by Fuji TV, using their commentators, but Super Power League 2 is the exception: instead, it used the sports commentators of TBS (Tokyo Broadcasting System).
Hudson would use elements of Super Power League 2 as the basis for The Sporting News: Baseball.
Tenshi No Uta: Shiroki Tsubasa no Inori is a video game published by Nippon Telenet Japan for the Super Famicom in 1994. It is the third episode in the Tenshi no Uta RPG series, but is not a true sequel to the first and second episodes previously released on the PC Engine.
A young knight and priestess is on a mission to explore all the magic caves located underneath the kingdom's castle. Their first task is to retrieve all the candies stolen by some grey little devils.
A street racing game from Media Rings that focuses on 400m drag races, the titular "Zero-4". It is the first of two Super Famicom games in the Zero-4 series.
Fire Pro Joshi All-Star Dream Slam (also known as Zen-Nippon Joshi Pro Wrestling Kounin: Fire Pro Joshi All-Star Dream Slam) is an all-female wrestling game from Human Entertainment and uses their 16-bit isometric Fire Pro Wrestling engine. The wrestlers are all taken from the Zen-Nippon Joshi Pro Wrestling ("All Japan Women's Pro Wrestling") circuit, an exclusively female wrestling promotion that lasted for many years in Japan.
As with prior Fire Pro Wrestling games, the mechanics behind the moves, pins and submissions rely more on timing and rhythm than button-mashing. Each bout is depicted with an isometric perspective, and various configurations of single-player and two-player controls are available for one-on-one matches and tag teams. The game features 18 pre-generated wrestlers and six create-a-wrestler slots.
Kabuki-chou Reach Mahjong: Toupuusen is a Miscellaneous game, developed by Studio Softmov and published by Pony Canyon, which was released in Japan in 1994.