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The Nintendo Entertainment System has a library of 1376 [a] officially licensed games released for the Japanese version, the Family Computer (Famicom), and its international counterpart, the NES, during their lifespans, plus 7 official multicarts and 2 championship cartridges. Of these, 672 were released exclusively in Japan, 187 were released ...
The series consists of emulated Nintendo Entertainment System, Family Computer, and Family Computer Disk System games for the Game Boy Advance. A special edition Game Boy Advance SP that has a similar color pattern to an NES controller (along with a Famicom counterpart in Japan), was released to go along with these games. In Japan, the color of ...
California Games (1989) for the NES; Captain Skyhawk (1990) for the NES; Corvette Zr-1 Challenge (1990) for the NES (European release only) Digger T. Rock (1990) for the NES; Jeopardy! (1983) for the OMNI; Jordan vs Bird: One on One (1989) for the NES; Marble Madness (1989) for the NES; Spitfire Attack (1983) for the Atari 2600; Survival Run ...
Super Nintendo Entertainment System [202] NHLPA Hockey '93: September 1992: Sega Genesis/Mega Drive: Park Place Productions [64]: 157 December 1992: Super Nintendo Entertainment System [203] Road Rash II: December 1992: Sega Genesis/Mega Drive: Electronic Arts [204] Air Land Sea: 1992: Amiga: Electronic Arts [205] [206] The Aquatic Games: 1992 ...
An NES game based on the Police Academy film series was set for a 1990 release, but the game experienced multiple delays and at one point restarted development before eventually being cancelled. [2] Tengen: Tengen: Pyross: A NES port of the arcade game Wardner (1987) was planned for release in North America under the name Pyross. Though ...
December 15 – Techno Soft releases Herzog Zwei for the Mega Drive in Japan, laying the foundations for the real-time strategy genre. December 22 – Konami releases Castlevania III: Dracula's Curse, the third and final game from series for NES. Tengen releases an unlicensed version of the Tetris video game, which is recalled after Nintendo ...
The very first game based on The Terminator was supposed to be an NES side-scroller from Sunsoft, but it never panned out that way. The company lost the movie license and reworked the game into ...
The Classic Series was a marketing label used by Nintendo in Europe and North America from 1992 onwards to describe a line of budget range rereleases of NES video games. Games released as part of the label were sold at a lower price, usually around half that of other NES titles (i.e. $29.99 instead of $49.99 in the United States [1] or DM 44.95 ...