Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
The original monochrome WonderSwan. This is a list of games for the Bandai WonderSwan handheld video game system, organized alphabetically by name, with the catalog number where known. The system and its games were not released outside Japan. There are 109 [a] games released on the original Wonderswan and they are compatible on every version of ...
The WonderSwan Color. This is a list of games for the Bandai WonderSwan Color handheld video game system, organized alphabetically by name. Games for the original WonderSwan also work on the WonderSwan Color, but are listed separately. The WonderSwan Color has 91 [a] games.
The WonderSwan Color has an approximate battery life of 20 hours. [9] The SwanCrystal improves upon the design of the WonderSwan Color through the use of a TFT LCD monitor, which has a superior response time to the FSTN monitor used in the former system. This helped to reduce motion blur in the handheld's graphics. The unit's case was also ...
Most of the games have been developed by Namco Bandai Games and have been released for a variety of home and handheld game consoles, such as Bandai's own WonderSwan. Common elements include battles between Digimon, with human "Tamers" present or otherwise, and the ability to " Digivolve " back and forth between several evolutionary forms. [ 1 ]
Digimon Tamers: Battle Spirit Ver. 1.5 (Japanese: デジモンテイマーズ バトルスピリット Ver.1.5, Hepburn: Dejimon Teimaazu Batoru Supiritto Ver. 1.5) is a fighting game developed and published by Bandai and released exclusively in Japan for the WonderSwan Color handheld console.
All of the CG artwork was redrawn when Riviera was remade from its WonderSwan Color version (top) to its Game Boy Advance counterpart (bottom). The PSP remake reuses the artwork from the GBA version at a higher resolution. Riviera: The Promised Land was originally developed for the WonderSwan Color. Development started in November 2000, with a ...
Klonoa: Moonlight Museum [a] is a video game developed by Namco and published by Bandai, released in Japan for the WonderSwan in 1999. It is the first handheld game in the Klonoa series to place him in a fully two-dimensional world, and established the system that the Game Boy Advance titles later used.
The game's music and updated aesthetics were then used in Magical Drop for WonderSwan, [b] released in 1999 for Bandai's WonderSwan. [citation needed] On April 26, 2001, Daibōken Mo Rakujyanai! was re-released by Hamster Corporation as part of their "Major Wave" series of budget titles. [12]