showing 801 - 830 of 830 gameschevron_leftchevron_right

name arrow_downwardpublisher(developer)yeardescriptionplatform
Ultraman: Kaijuu Teikoku no Gyakushuu  Bandai1987"Ultraman: Kaijuu Teikoku no Gyakushuu" is the first Ultraman videogame. First task in every level is to build up your power bar via collecting energy balls. So you are running and shooting enemies and try to find and collect the energy balls. Once the bar is complete you are ready to transform into Ultraman and challenge the end boss of each level in hand to hand combat. The game is really average. While the platform/shooting parts are playable the boss fights suffer from bad controls. Each level has different graphics but plays very similar (except for two levels which are pure horizontal-scrolling shooting parts) and the graphics are not very detailed. Famicom Disk Systemlabelimageminimize
Ultraman: Towards the Future  Bandai (Nova Games)1991Gigantic and treacherous aliens are invading Earth. They're destroying our cities and leaving a path of chaos around the planet. There is one humongous hero powerful enough to eradicate these creatures... Ultraman!!! Part human, part super being, he's got what it takes to eliminate the evil aliens once and for all. Ultraman uses his special weapons along with martial arts, wresting, and street brawling skills to fight off each attacking monster.

This game utilizes its 16-Bit power to its fullest. Really large characters, detailed landscapes, realistic sound effect and music that are gonna know you out!***
[64]***
[63]***Japanese version
[52]***
[29]***
[27]***Play as Ultraman as he fights his greatest rubber monster foes! As you fight, earn power to use special energy attacks until you can finish off the monster with the Burning Plasma! This one is for fans of the TV series only.
[Jacquismo]
SNESlabelimagesubject
Urban Reign  Namco;Bandai (Namco)2005Gang life and street justice rule the inner city, turning neighborhoods into war zones. One of the City's many gangs has hired you to protect their leader, plunging you into a war that involves corruption spanning from the streets all the way to the upper levels of city government. These fights aren't timed. There are no referees. Use what you can. There's no such things as a clean fight. Blaze through the streets and complete up to 100 missions to protect your turf. Team up with a friend or AI controlled to pull off a host of destructive double team moves against multiple enemies. Play as one of over 60 characters in the multiplayer mode. Urban Reign brings the fight back to the streets. Are you down to control your hood?
[R2D2-A]
PS2labelimagesubject
Urusei Yatsura Bandai1982 Game & Watchlabelimageminimize
Vaitz Blade Bandai1999Pokemon clone, released only in Japan. WonderSwanminimizeimageminimize
Vattroller X Bandai2004 GBAminimizeimageminimize
Villgust  Bandai;Plex1992Released only in Japan, translated by fans to english. SNESlabelimageminimize
Welcome Nakayoshi Park Bandai1994 GBlabelimageminimize
Whizz Konami;Bandai (B-Factory)1997 Saturnlabelimageminimize
Wild Boys Bandai? NESminimizeminimizeminimize
Wizardry: Proving Grounds of The Mad Overlord Bandai2001 WonderSwan Colorlabelimageminimize
Wonder Classic  Namco;Bandai (Yoshidayama Workshop)2001Compatible with the original black & white WonderSwan. WonderSwan Colorlabelimageminimize
Wuz↑b? Produce Street Dancer  Amuse;Bandai (Fortyfive)2000 WonderSwanlabelimageminimize
X Card of Fate  Bandai2002 WonderSwan Colorlabelimageminimize
X: Unmei no Tatakai Bandai2002 PSlabelimageminimize
Xevious  Namco;Bandai (Namco)1984
[49]***
[33]***
[52]***Yes, Xevious is a classic arcade title of some fame. And it is a title released early in the Famicom era. But that shouldn't be an excuse for an overall unenjoyable gaming experience. Gameplay could be considered well done, since the controls are decent and the fact that you must throw bombs on ground targets gives the game a bit variety. But it is exactly the boringness and the non-variety of all the rest with the neverending flight over very plain ground with dull colors, shooting waves after waves of the same, bad looking flying enemies and ground targets that makes this game so inferior to nearly all shooters that would follow. The sound is especially annoying.***Players control their Solvalou ship and destroy the XEVIOUS forces. Fire the zapper missiles against air-based enemies and drop the blaster bombs down upon ground-based targets. Destroy Andor Genesis to earn bonus points. Unique enemies, interesting background music, a variety of vertically scrolling background environments and many hidden game play features differentiated Xevious from the other shooting games released at the time. Are you devious enough to beat Xevious?
NESlabelimagesubject
Yakitate!! Japan - Choujou Kessen Pantastic Grand Prix Bandai2005 Nintendo DSminimizeimageminimize
Yakusoku no Chi Riviera  Bandai (Sting)2002 WonderSwan Colorlabelimageminimize
Yam Yam  Bandai;Pandora Box1995 SNESlabelimageminimize
Yes! Precure 5 Bandai2007 Nintendo DSlabelimageminimize
You Don't Know Jack Berkeley Systems;Bandai (Jellyvision)1995 Windowslabelminimizeminimize
You Don't Know Jack Bandai (Jellyvision)1999What is JACK? With original music, blistering humor and a sarcastic host, YOU DON'T KNOW JACK is the quiz show party game where high culture and pop culture collides. Get ready for a head-to-head trivia showdown where you put your knowledge to the test and your ego on the line.***"Turn your PlayStation game console into a party! With original music, blistering humor and a sarcastic host, You Don't Know Jack whisks you from the green room to prime time at a pace so fast it will make your head spin. Get the question right and score some cash; get it wrong and pay the price."
You Don't Know Jack is a great quiz show party game with over 1400 questions. Up to 3 players can compete at one time answering question types like shorties, DisOrDat, ThreeWay, Impossible Questions and Jack Attack. This is a can't miss at your next party!
[R2D2-A]
PSlabelimagesubject
You Don't Know Jack Volume 2  Bandai;BMG Interactive (Jellyvision)1996Since the first game was never released in Germany, this one was released under the title You Don't Know Jack in Germany. Of course, the questions are not identical to the US version because many of them are language-dependent or about things little known in Germany but the game's engines are the same and they feature the same game modes. Windowslabelminimizeminimize
You Don't Know Jack: Sports Berkeley Systems;Bandai (Jellyvision)1996 Windowslabelminimizeminimize
You Don't Know Jack: Volume 3  Bandai (Jellyvision)1997Released as You Don't Know Jack 2 in Germany. The questions are not identical to the US version because many of them are language-dependent or about things little known in Germany but the game's engines are the same and they feature the same game modes. Windowslabelminimizeminimize
You Don't Know Jack: Volume 4 - The Ride  Bandai (Jellyvision)1998Released as You Don't Know Jack 3: Abwärts in Germany. The questions are not identical to the US version because many of them are language-dependent or about things little known in Germany but the game's engines are the same and they feature the same game modes. Windowslabelminimizeminimize
Yū Yū Hakusho: Bakutō Ankoku Bujutsue  Bandai1993 NESlabelminimizeminimize
ZatchBell! - Electric Arena Bandai (Eighting)2005 GBAlabelimageminimize
ZatchBell! Mamodo Battles Bandai (Eighting)2005 GameCubelabelimageminimize
ZXE-D: Legend of Plasmalite Bandai1996PS-type three-dimensional plastic models that came with the flash with a proprietary system to customize the game can actually be connected to recalibrate itself to the 3D fighting action game robots.
Upper body, lower body, right, like in each part of the left that we have re-robots that can demonstrate the power of "Zekushido" puppet, and regain peace to mankind.
PSlabelimagesubject
first_page chevron_left 17 of 17 chevron_rightlast_page
permalink