Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Re-released on MSX in 1986 (as Bomberman Special) and on Game Boy Advance and N-Gage in 2004. Bomberman: 1990 1991: TurboGrafx-16/PC Engine, X68000, Amiga, MS-DOS, Atari ST: Released as Bomberman for the TG-16/PC Engine release, which was the first Bomberman release to support five players; first Bomberman game for the IBM-PC. Bomberman II ...
Atomic Bomberman is a game by Interplay Productions for the PC that was released in 1997. It was the first original Bomberman game to be developed for Windows , and the second game of the series made for the PC, following Dynablaster .
Bomberman '94 (ボンバーマン'94, Bonbāman Nintī Fō) is a video game from the Bomberman series which was developed and published by Hudson Soft for the PC Engine and released on December 10, 1993, in Japan. It was later re-developed by Westone and re-published by Sega as Mega Bomberman on the Sega Mega Drive/Genesis in 1994 in
This is a list of video games developed or published by Hudson Soft.The following dates are based on the earliest release, typically in Japan.While Hudson Soft started releasing video games in 1978, it was not until 1983 that the company began to gain serious notability among the video gaming community.
Bomberman (ボンバーマン, Bonbāman, also briefly known as Dyna Blaster in Europe [1]) is a video game franchise created by Shinichi Nakamoto and Shigeki Fujiwara, originally developed by Hudson Soft and currently owned by Konami.
Bomberman: Panic Bomber [a] is a 1994 puzzle video game developed and published by Hudson Soft for the PC Engine (in Super CD-ROM² format) on December 22, 1994. It was later released for the Neo Geo , Super Famicom , Sharp X68000 , FM Towns , NEC PC-9821 , Virtual Boy , and PlayStation Portable .
Bomber Man World [a] is a 1992 video game released by Irem under license from Hudson Soft for arcades. [2] [3] It is part of the Bomberman series.It was the second Bomberman game to be released for arcades, preceded by Bomberman (1991), which was also released by Irem.
The host in this article is the system running the emulator, and the guest is the system being emulated. The list is organized by guest operating system (the system being emulated), grouped by word length. Each section contains a list of emulators capable of emulating the specified guest, details of the range of guest systems able to be ...