Yokoyama Mitsuteru Sangokushi is a strategy game based on the anime and manga of the same name by manga artist Yokoyama Mitsuteru. The name simply means "Yokoyama Mitsuteru's version of Sangokushi", Sangokushi being the Japanese name for the Chinese literary classic Romance of the Three Kingdoms. The manga and anime retell the story of the book, with the game focused on this retelling.
During the game's development the anime adaptation was in full swing, so the game was intended to be a companion piece. This was a standard practice of Bandai at the time (Angel was a game publisher subsidiary of the toy giant), as was hiring freelance developers like TOSE to develop for them.
The game is a standard turn-based strategy war sim in the vein of Koei's much more prolific Romance of the Three Kingdoms series. The player and the AI-controlled rival kingdoms select actions that include diplomacy, combat and domestic matters such as farming and trade, with the ultimate goal being to wrest control over the rest of China fro
A Super Famicom strategy war sim from Wolf Team. It is set in the Sengoku era of Japanese history.
Zan II: Spirits is the first Super Famicom game in Wolf Team's series of strategy sims set in historical Japan. It was eventually followed up with a sequel, Zan III: Spirits.
As with its thematically-similar contemporaries, like Shingen the Ruler or Nobunaga's Ambition, Zan II puts the player in the geta of a Japanese feudal lord, or daimyo, with designs to wrest control over the rest of Japan from the other daimyos. The game is more focused on warfare than day-to-day resource management, with armies of samurai marching across the map to attack fortresses and pagodas that host enemy flags.
A fantasy RPG for the Super Famicom. Notable for allowing up to five party members in combat and breaks the usual 9999 limit for health. Never released outside of Japan, but fan translations exist.
Super Aleste (スーパーアレスタ, Sūpā Aresuta), is a vertically scrolling shooter developed by Compile. It was published by Toho in 1992 for the Super Famicom as part of the Aleste series. The player pilots a spacecraft through a variety of locales shooting enemy ships.
F-1 Grand Prix is a 1991 Formula One-based arcade racing video game developed and published by Video System exclusively in Japan. It is the first title in Video System's licensed F1 Grand Prix series, which this title is based on the 1991 Formula One season. It was licensed by Fuji Television and FOCA. The arcade game was later ported to the Super Famicom exclusively in Japan on April 28, 1992.
Heroes unite! The World is plummeting into chaos. Be the hero that shines the light of hope! SD Great Battle has returned to Super Famicom, with more heroes, villains and action!
Taluluto must cross levels in five worlds to reach and defeat Raivar to save Honmaru's girlfriend Iyona. Use the many powerups and the assistance from Magical Taluluto's friends to overcome all obstacles.
Dragon Ball Z: Super Saiya Densetsu is a role playing video game and the first Dragon Ball game for the Super Famicom. It was released only in Japan on January 25, 1992.
Super Saiya Densetsu is a remake combining two earlier Famicom games of the Gokuden series: Dragon Ball Z: Kyōshū! Saiyan and Dragon Ball Z II: Gekishin Freeza, but without the movie characters and anime filler elements that were featured in them.
Chibi Maruko-Chan: Harikiri 365-Nichi no Maki is a Miscellaneous game, developed by SAS Sakata and published by Epoch, which was released in Japan in 1991.