Boogerman II: The Final Adventure is an unlicensed port of the Mega Drive version of Boogerman: A Pick and Flick Adventure, made by Rex Soft in 1997.
The gameplay is slow, and the controls are far less responsive than Super Game's version. There are 2 extra powers than what Super Game's version had: Belch and the Flame Gas ability (This power only works if pressing A, B, And Select all at once), but lacks garbage piles and the Milk Jug powerup. Also, it has two bosses removed from Super Game's version: FlyBoy and Revolta. The music in this version is more recognizable than Super Game's version. In the story intro, the text is scrolling up, instead of paragraphs, and lacks the animation of Boogerman cleaning the room. Super Game's version combines all four levels into one 1 Level each, but Boogerman II has only 2 of the four levels, separately, like Earthworm Jim 3 by Hummer Team, also made in 1997.
Super Boogerman is a Famicom port of Boogerman: A Pick and Flick Adventure, originally released for Sega Mega Drive and Super Nintendo. It was produced by Super Game and published by Realtec.
The game is a recreation of the original Boogerman, but is considerably less faithful than Boogerman II: The Final Adventure, with a mixed-up level order and severely limited abilities for the player, which is compensated for by providing infinite ammo.
Like many of Super Game's other bootlegs, this game has no ending; after the player defeats the third boss, the game merely resets.
BomberBoy is a port of the Sega Genesis/Mega Drive game Mega Bomberman (itself a port of the PC Engine/TurboGrafx-16 game Bomberman '94) for the Famicom made by Super Game and released on a multicart in 1997 by an unknown publisher. While being only released in 1997, it appears to be Super Game's first title, made around 1995 and unfinished for unknown reasons.
Contra Spirits, also known as Super Contra 3, is a pirated Famicom port of Contra III: The Alien Wars (Contra Spirits in Japan and Super Probotector: Alien Rebels in Europe) for the SNES, made by Ei-How Yang (and possibly others) in 1995. It was only released in 1997.
Pocket Monster is a NES platformer featuring Pikachu. It was also ported to the Game Boy Advance under the name Pokémon Gold Version.
This is a simple platformer, in which the player controls Pikachu. Compared to many other NES games, the controls are inverted, which means that jumping is done by pressing B, and pressing A while moving in a direction makes Pikachu run, and A on its' own clears every enemy on the screen. It's also possible to stomp on enemies, similarly to Super Mario Bros.. Pikachu can take three hits before losing a life, with the number of hits left represented by a Poké Ball counter on the top left corner of the screen. There are a total of four worlds (Velbt, Woods, Tableland, and Motte) which are split into three levels each, as well as a single-screen boss battle at the end of each. This game has a debug mode enabled by default, allowing the player free movement while paused and to skip to the next level by pressing Select. In some places, the player can fall partway into the ground, altho
Donkey Kong Country 4 is a pirated port of Donkey Kong Country from 1994 for the SNES, made by Hummer Team in 1997.
The gameplay, graphics, and sound are similar to the official Game Boy Color port of Donkey Kong Country, albeit downgraded to work on the Famicom. It's often considered to be significantly superior to other pirates based on the Donkey Kong Country series.
An unlicensed shooter from Inventor for the Famicom, allowing players to choose from 6 different stages of dinosaur action. Compatible with the NES zapper.
A platformer in which the player has to guide the characters from the film with each of them having their own abilities. The plot follows that of the 1939 movie.
Many of the graphics are ripped from numerous other games. The title screen bears a strong resemblance to Castle of Dragon's intro. Barza from Kyoryu Sentai Zyuranger is used in the cutscenes, the "To Green Castle" signs are taken from Mickey Mousecapade, the "Good luck!" message in the opening story being taken from Crossfire, the windows in the first level are likely re-edits of those from Hummer Team's Aladdin pirate, and Willy from Rockin' Kats shows up several times in the ending sequence.
As well as this, the mushroom enemy is taken from Don Doko Don 2 and the small one-eyed green blobs that the frog spits at you are the aliens from one of the bosses in Chip 'n Dale Rescue Rangers for NES, while one more enemy is from Little Samson. A few enemies are taken from Panic Restaurant, such as the jumping sausage (re-colored to green). The last boss is co
Mickey Mania 7 (米奇吉鼠) is a pirated port of Mickey Mania: The Timeless Adventures of Mickey Mouse, released on the Famicom. It was developed by Ei-How Yang in 1996 and is the second game that was developed for J.Y. Company.
Earthworm Jim 2 (蚯蚓吉姆2) is an unlicensed port of the game of the same name, made for the Famicom by a team of (or at least related to) Ex-Sachen developers and published by Ka Sheng in 1996.
Mortal Kombat 3, better known by its mapper hack, Mortal Kombat 4, is a pirated fighting game that was developed by Hummer Team and published by Ka Sheng, with MK4 later re-released by ABAB Soft on a multicart. The game is based on Mortal Kombat 3.
Despite Bao the judge is mentioned prominently throughout the game, he is, in fact, not the player character - the players themselves control one or two of Bao's servants.
Lin Zexu: No Smoking is an Action Role-Playing game, developed by Fuzhou Waixing Computer Science & Technology, (a chinese gaming company known for making unlicensed Famicom games and other electronics), in 1996. The game was translated to English by pacnsacdave in 2017.
Chu Da D (鋤大D) is a Famicom game developed by Ex-Sachen developers and published by Fortune Power/Jichang in 1995. It is based on the card game of the same Chinese name, often known as Big Two elsewhere.
AV Jiu Ji Ma Jiang II (AV究極麻將2), also known as AV Kyuukyoku Mahjong 2 is an adult versus Mahjong game developed by Hummer Team and released by Ge De Industry Co. around 1995. It is a backport of Dial Q wo Mawase (ダイヤルQをまわせ!), an unlicensed Sega Mega Drive title.