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Dynablaster or Dyna Blaster is a name that has been given to the European releases of four different games of the Bomberman franchise: Atomic Punk ( Game Boy ) Bomberman ( TurboGrafx-16 , MS-DOS , Amiga and Atari ST )
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 [a], also known as Dyna Blaster in Europe, is an action-maze video game originally developed and published by Hudson Soft for the PC Engine in Japan on 7 December 1990 and later in North America for the TurboGrafx-16 by NEC in 1991.
Released as Dynablaster in Europe Bomberman '93: 1992 1993: TurboGrafx-16/PC Engine: Released on Wii's Virtual Console. Hi-Ten Bomberman: 1993: Custom NEC PC: Considered to be the first-ever HD game and said to be the basis for Saturn Bomberman. 10-player multitap support and first game in the series to support ten players locally. Bomberman ...
Bomberman II [a], released in Europe and Australia as Dynablaster, is a maze video game developed and published by Hudson Soft for the Nintendo Entertainment System originally in Japan and Europe in 1991 and later in North America in February 1993.
Atomic Punk, released in Japan as Bomber Boy (ボンバーボーイ, Bonbā Bōi) and in Europe as Dynablaster, is a video game released for the Game Boy in 1990 by Hudson Soft, as part of the Bomberman series. It was the first game of the series to be released on the Game Boy.
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.
Bomberman [a] is a maze video game developed and published by Hudson Soft.The original home computer game Bomber Man [b] was released in July 1983 for the NEC PC-8801, NEC PC-6001 mkII, Fujitsu FM-7, Sharp MZ-700, Sharp MZ-2000, Sharp X1 and MSX in Japan, and a graphically modified version for the MSX and ZX Spectrum in Europe as Eric and the Floaters.