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Most Popular Family Computer Games - Page 22

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  • Fantasy Zone

    1987

    Fantasy Zone

    1987

    Shooter Adventure
    Family Computer
    The Fantasy Zone port for Family Computer was developed by Sunsoft.
  • Armed Dragon Fantasy Villgust

    1993

    Armed Dragon Fantasy Villgust

    1993

    Role-playing (RPG)
    Family Computer
    Armed Dragon Fantasy Villgust is a Role-Playing game, developed by TOSE and published by Angel (Bandai), which was released in Japan in 1993. This game is based off the anime of the same name that was released many years ago.
  • Daisenryaku

    1988

    Daisenryaku

    1988

    Turn-based strategy (TBS)
    Family Computer
    Daisenryaku is a Strategy game, developed by Quest and published by Bothtec, which was released in Japan in 1988.
  • Momotaro Densetsu Gaiden

    1993

    Momotaro Densetsu Gaiden

    1993

    Role-playing (RPG)
    Family Computer
    The Family Computer port of the Game Boy game under the name of Momotaro Densetsu Gaiden. A spin-off of Hudson's Peach Boy RPG series that focuses on three side characters instead. The game switches focus from Momotarou to three extra characters, each has their own distinct campaign to play through. One follows a standard RPG route of a hero's journey, another involves the princess of the kingdom of demons as she attempts to uncover an attack on her father's throne with a band of allied monsters, and the third involves a thief who steals money from monsters and gives it to beggars. Each campaign follows the core gameplay of the series: overworld exploration and turn-based combat.
  • Donkey Kong Country 4

    1997

    Donkey Kong Country 4

    1997

    Platform Adventure
    Family Computer
    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.
  • Super Xevious: Gamp no Nazo

    1986

    Super Xevious: Gamp no Nazo

    1986

    Shooter Arcade
    Family Computer
    In Super Xevious: Gamp no Nazo the player controls a spaceship named the Solvalou in its mission to destroy a powerful supercomputer named GAMP, which took over Earth during an ice age. Gamp no Nazo features a heavy focus on puzzle-solving, with each of the game's 21 levels posing a puzzle that must be solved to progress.
  • Super Bros. 8

    1992

    Super Bros. 8

    1992

    Platform
    Family Computer
    Super Bros. 8 is a hack of Don Doko Don 2, released sometime in the early 1990's (likely in March 1992, as implied by its manufacture code). It was likely developed by J.Y. Company, as its PCB has two PROMs suggesting this: one reads JY-A1 and another JY211.
  • The Legend of Zelda: Shénqí de Màozi

    The Legend of Zelda: Shénqí de Màozi

    Role-playing (RPG) Adventure
    Family Computer
    The Legend of Zelda: Shénqí de Màozi is a backport of The Legend of Zelda: The Minish Cap on the Famicom. It was published and developed by Shenzhen Nanjing. This game has a title hack where the title screen is changed to The Phantom Hourglass.
  • Zelda Chuánshuō: Sān Shén Zhī lì

    2004

    Zelda Chuánshuō: Sān Shén Zhī lì

    2004

    Role-playing (RPG) Adventure
    Family Computer
    Zelda Chuánshuō: Sān Shén Zhī lì is a bootleg game developed by Mars Production and published by Waixing for the Famicom. It is a backport of The Legend of Zelda: A Link to the Past for the SNES.
  • Léidiàn Huáng: Pikachu Chuánshuō

    2004

    Léidiàn Huáng: Pikachu Chuánshuō

    2004

    Role-playing (RPG)
    Family Computer
    Léidiàn Huáng: Bíkǎqiū Chuánshuō (also known as Pokémon Yellow) is a pirated game for the NES made by Shenzhen Nanjing. It's generally regarded as being of higher quality compared to Shenzhen Nanjing's other games. This game is basically a port of Pokémon FireRed / Pokémon LeafGreen Version and Pokémon Yellow Version mixed together with some changes to it.
  • 8Bit Music Power

    2016

    8Bit Music Power

    2016

    Music Indie
    Family Computer
  • Super Mario World

    1995

    Super Mario World

    1995

    Platform
    Family Computer
    Super Mario World (超級馬里奧世界) is a bootleg port of the SNES launch title of the same name (Super Mario World) developed by Hummer Team and released in 1995. This is one of the more well-known examples of bootleg ports to the Famicom, as it comparatively manages to retain most of the original SNES game's elements.
  • Sekiryuuou

    1999

    Sekiryuuou

    1999

    Family Computer
    Sekiryuuou is a text adventure game developed by Tokai Engineering for the Famicom, and published in Japan by Sunsoft. It is based on a Japanese manga set during a historical Chinese civil war. The player controls a protagonist via a series of menus in order to solve a series of puzzles. The game, and the manga it is based on, depict a period of ancient Chinese history between the Qin and Han dynasties, a few decades before the Three Kingdoms era began. As expected of a transitional period, there was plenty of intrigue and conflict leading up to the change of power that future novels and mangas could draw from.
  • Toukon Club

    1992

    Toukon Club

    1992

    Arcade
    Family Computer
    Toukon Club is a wrestling game for the Nintendo Entertainment System.
  • Igo Meikan

    1990

    Igo Meikan

    1990

    Family Computer
    Igo Meikan ("Go Directory") is a go game for the Famicom released by Hect, a developer that specialized in board game to video game adaptations. It is primarily focused on teaching the player to play go like the pros, with the meikan (or directory) in this case being a list of techniques and tactics. As with all versions of go, the goal is to surround the opposing player's pieces, thereby capturing them and removing them from the board. The winner is whoever has the most pieces on the board left when both players have stopped taking turns (usually because there's no more legal moves).
  • Mickey Mouse III: Yume Fuusen

    1992

    Mickey Mouse III: Yume Fuusen

    1992

    Platform Puzzle
    Family Computer
    Mickey Mouse III: Yume Fuusen is the third game in the Crazy Castle series, and became known in the West as Kid Klown in Night Mayor World.
  • Super Mario 14

    1993

    Super Mario 14

    1993

    Platform
    Family Computer
    Super Mario 14 is a hack of the Japan-exclusive Famicom title Kaiketsu Yanchamaru 3: Taiketsu! Zouringen, the second follow-up to Kid Niki: Radical Ninja.
  • Miss Peach World

    1991

    Miss Peach World

    1991

    Family Computer
    This reskinned version of Menace Beach makes several changes to the original game. It replaces the original male protagonist with a female skateboarder and adds new background music between levels.
  • Fēng Shén Bǎng

    Fēng Shén Bǎng

    Fighting
    Family Computer
    Fēng Shén Bǎng is a 1996 one-on-one fighting game released for the Famicom throughout Asia. It was also released with a localized label as Myth Struggle, although the in-game content is unchanged. The game is based on the 16th century Chinese epic novel of the same name, also called Fēngshén Yǎnyì (封神演義) and often translated to Investiture of the Gods or The Creation of the Gods. The game is essentially a hacked version of Hummer Team's earlier bootleg version of DragonBall Z: Super Butōden 2, which was originally released on the Super NES. The change by Waixing was made to legitimize the content as to not run into copyright laws, as this version was also released (although still unlicensed by Nintendo) in Japan and with likely intent to distribute outside of Asia.
  • Donkey Kong no Ongaku Asobi

    Donkey Kong no Ongaku Asobi

    Music
    Family Computer
    Donkey Kong no Ongaku Asobi is a canceled game set for release on the Family Computer. It would have followed Popeye no Eigo Asobi and released alongside Donkey Kong Jr. Math as one of the edutainment games based on the Famicom's launch titles. Donkey Kong no Ongaku Asobi starred the cast of Donkey Kong and Donkey Kong Jr. The game never surfaced, and seems to have only been announced in 1983 in a Japanese handbill as well as magazines.
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