Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Super Nintendo Entertainment System cartridges. Top: North American design Bottom: PAL/Japanese region design. The Super Nintendo Entertainment System has a library of 1,738 official releases, of which 717 were released in North America plus 4 championship cartridges, 522 in Europe, 1,448 in Japan, 231 on Satellaview, and 13 on SuFami Turbo. 295 releases are common to all regions, 148 were ...
The Super NES CD-ROM [1] [a] (commonly abbreviated to SNES CD) is an unreleased add-on for the Super Nintendo Entertainment System (SNES) video game console. It was built upon the functionality of the cartridge -based SNES by adding support for the CD-ROM format.
Aero the Acro-Bat 2; Aerobiz; Aerobiz Supersonic; Aguri Suzuki F-1 Super Driving; Aim for the Ace! (1993 video game) Air Cavalry; Albert Odyssey (1993 video game) Alcahest (video game) Alfred Chicken; Alice no Paint Adventure; Alien 3 (video game) Alien vs Predator (SNES) The Amazing Spider-Man: Lethal Foes; American Gladiators (video game)
Killer Instinct 2: A SNES version of Killer Instinct 2 (1996) was in development, but was cancelled in favor of a Nintendo 64 release. [67] Rare Midway Games: Lobo: A fighting game based on the Lobo comic book series was announced, and far enough along to have review copies sent to publications, but it never released. A prototype of the game ...
The emulator became free software under the GPL-2.0-or-later license on 2 April 2001. Despite an announcement by adventure_of_link in 2009 stating that "ZSNES is NOT dead, it's still in development", made on the ZSNES board after the departure of its original developers zsKnight and _Demo_ , [ 1 ] development has slowed dramatically since its ...
The GSU-1 however runs at the full 21.47 MHz. Both the MARIO CHIP 1 and the GSU-1 can support a maximum ROM size of 8 Mbits. The design was revised to the GSU-2, which is still 16-bit, but this version can support a ROM size greater than 8 Mbit. The final known revision is the GSU-2-SP1.
Founded in early 1990, St.GIGA was a satellite radio subsidiary of the Japanese satellite television company WOWOW Inc., based in Akasaka, Tokyo. [2] Credited as the world's first digital satellite radio station, [3] it was maintained by Hiroshi Yokoi and best known for its "Tide of Sound" broadcasts, which were high-quality digital recordings of nature sounds accompanied by a spoken word ...
File:Front cover of the European SNES version of the Hebereke's Popoitto video game.jpg File:Front Mission.jpg File:Full Throttle All-America Racing Coverart.png