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PlayChoice-10 machine arcade cabinet. The PlayChoice-10 is an arcade system developed and marketed by Nintendo. Released in August 1986 as the successor to the Nintendo VS. System, the PlayChoice-10 was developed as a means to showcase NES games while maintaining revenue from the arcade business; it did so by allowing players to test up to ten ...
This category includes a list of Nintendo Entertainment System games released on PlayChoice-10 arcade machines. Pages in category "PlayChoice-10 games" The following 46 pages are in this category, out of 46 total.
A version of NES Open Tournament Golf, branded as Mario's Open Golf, was one of the few titles released for Nintendo's PlayChoice-10 arcade machines. [citation needed] PlayChoice-10 games varied slightly from their original NES counterparts, as additional circuitry was needed to allow the game to run on the arcade machine. [7]
This is a list of games at Funspot, an arcade located in the village of Weirs Beach in Laconia, ... PlayChoice-10: Video game Nintendo: 1986 Pleiads: Video game Tecmo ...
Yamauchi still had faith there was a market for the Famicom, so he introduced it to North America through the arcade industry. [4] Nintendo based the VS. System hardware on the Famicom, and introduced it as the successor to its Nintendo-Pak arcade system, which had been used for games such as Mario Bros. and Donkey Kong 3.
In August 1987, Nintendo released an arcade machine called Playchoice-10 that contained up to ten popular NES titles. [25] Amongst the eligible NES games, Rad Racer was also available on the arcade machine. [26] Finally, the game was later released for the NES as Rad Racer in October 1987 in North America and on January 15, 1988 in Europe. [27 ...
Although the game was never sold in retail in North America, Nintendo published an arcade port in North America for the VS. System (a coin-operated platform which runs on the same hardware as the NES) under the title VS. The Goonies and it was also available as a PlayChoice-10 title in the region. [4]
Most of the original stages from the arcade version were extended as well, and the second half of Scene 3, the parking garage stage, replaces the arcade version's end battle with both Bebop and Rocksteady with a battle against the mutated fly form of Baxter Stockman. The NES port appeared in Nintendo's PlayChoice-10 arcade system.