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Fantasy Zone arcade board. Fantasy Zone was ported to the Master System, MSX, Nintendo Entertainment System, X68000, and PC Engine—all with similar gameplay. For example, the Master System version lacks some features such as the radar that indicates the location of the bases or a gauge that indicates energy level, and two of the bosses were replaced by alternate bosses.
Fantasy Zone II: The Tears of Opa-Opa [a] is a horizontally scrolling shooter for the Master System published by Sega in 1987. It was ported to the arcade, Famicom, and MSX2, and was remade for the System 16 hardware on a PlayStation 2 compilation in 2008.
Fantasy Zone: 1986 Arcade: Sega Ages 2500 Vol. 3: Fantasy Zone JP: 2003: PlayStation 2: 3D remake. [169] Sega Classics Collection NA EU: 2005 [170] Far Cry: 2004 Windows: Far Cry Instincts: 2005 Xbox: More linear remake of original game.
Hardcore Gaming 101 writer Kurt Kalata felt that Super Fantasy Zone was the first sequel to the original Fantasy Zone arcade game that "not only matches, but surpasses its predecessor in aesthetics, with gorgeous graphics and an insanely catchy soundtrack." He noted how its visuals defy the Mega Drive's limited color palette, and the music was ...
Fantasy Zone Gear: Shoot-'em-Up Sanritsu Game Gear Flicky: Action Sega Genesis Golden Axe II: Golden Axe Warrior: Action adventure Master System Ghouls 'n Ghosts: Action Capcom, Sega House of Tarot: Educational Japan System Supply Game Gear Forgotten Worlds: Shoot-'em-Up Capcom, Sega Master System Ikasuze! Koi no Doki Doki Penguin Land MD ...
Hatsune Miku: Project DIVA Arcade; Head On (video game) Heavyweight Champ; Heiankyo Alien; Holosseum; Hot Rod (video game) The House of the Dead (video game) The House of the Dead 2; The House of the Dead III; The House of the Dead 4; House of the Dead: Scarlet Dawn; Hummer (2009 video game)
In addition to making its own games, Sega has licensed out its arcade systems to third party publishers. This list comprises all of the games released on these arcade system boards. Sega has been producing electro-mechanical games since the 1960s, arcade video games since the early 1970s, and unified arcade systems since the late 1970s.
TwinBee (ツインビー, TsuinBī) is a vertically scrolling shooter released by Konami as an arcade video game in 1985 in Japan. Along with Sega's Fantasy Zone, released a year later, TwinBee is credited as an early archetype of the "cute 'em up" type in its genre. [1] It was the first game to run on Konami's Bubble System hardware. [2]