Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Because the PC-98 had a kanji character ROM, Japanese applications were developed for it, which influenced Japanese input methods being developed for them; the two built on each other. Software companies that developed games for the PC-98 immediately expanded the video game business on the Famicom platform.
NEC PC-9801. Listed here are all 1,228 known games released for the PC-98. [1] List of games. Title Release date(s) Developer(s) Publisher(s) 101-kaime no Approach ...
Pages in category "NEC PC-9801 games" The following 200 pages are in this category, out of approximately 319 total. ... List of PC-98 games; 0–9. 4D Sports Tennis ...
PC-98, FM Towns, X68000: 18 October 1991: Cobra Mission: Panic in Cobra City: INOS Hard, Megatech Software: PC-98, DOS: 25 October 1991: Monkey Island 2: LeChuck's Revenge: LucasArts: LucasArts Original version DOS, Mac OS, Amiga, FM Towns Special edition iOS, Microsoft Windows, PlayStation 3, Xbox 360: December 1991: Special edition released ...
PC-8801SR, PC-9801, MSX2, FM Towns, Sharp X68000, MS-DOS (Chinese), SNES, Windows 98: 1991: Ishin no Arashi: 維新の嵐 Koei Koei Ishin no Arashi: Historical role-playing: PC-8801, PC-9801, NES, Sega Saturn, PlayStation, X68000, MSX, FM-7, FM Towns, X1: 1988: Ishin no Arashi Bakumatsu Shishiden: 維新の嵐 幕末志士伝 Koei Koei Ishin no ...
Steam-Heart's was initially released on PC-98 personal computers on March 15, 1994; a version for the PC Engine Super CD-ROM² System was released in 1996 followed by another for the Sega Saturn in 1998, all of which were for the Japanese market. Critics generally found the gameplay to be average, with the erotic content being the sole ...
PC-98 [1] 1994 FM Towns [2] 1994 Windows 95 [3] 1996: Genre(s) Construction and management simulation: Mode(s) Single-player: SimFarm: SimCity's Country Cousin is a ...
Rusty [a] is an action video game developed and published by C-Lab in Japan in July 1993 for PC-98 with MS-DOS, with direction, writing and programming by Naoto Niida, production by Masayoshi Koyama, and music by Masahiro Kajihara, Kenichi Arakawa, and Ryu Takami.