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#Bomberman PSP
mkmikunasu · 5 months
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I don't have any ideas to celebrate Christmas, but I have pixel arts that I made yesterday and today
Btw, Merry Christmas to all!
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devileaterjaek · 1 year
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gwimgamer · 7 months
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Bomberman - Explosive Fun on the PSP: Review and Gameplay
⭐⭐⭐⭐ Rating: 4 out of 5. Get ready to light the fuse and ignite some explosive mayhem in “Bomberman” on the PlayStation Portable (PSP). I’m [Your Name], and today, we’re diving into the world of classic bomb-dropping action. This iconic title, developed by Hudson Soft, promises hours of chaotic fun and strategic blasts. Game Overview:“Bomberman” takes the timeless gameplay of the Bomberman…
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bombermanga · 2 months
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Open Call: Translating Bomberman Video Games
What up, bomberbutts! It sure has been a hot minute and a half. Unfortunately, I have no updates regarding any of Bombermanga's projects (except that nothing's abandoned, just backburnered). What I do have for y'all is a potential opportunity for folks to get involved in someone else's bombertranslation project — one in which translation skills aren't necessarily needed!
Legato at BombermanBoard (he of the SteamyJimmy YouTube channel, which got nuked after he posted subs for BMJ's Episode 53 drama CD and the entirety of the Bakugaiden IV anime) is looking to organize a group effort to translate several Bomberman games that never made it out of the land of the rising sun. This includes:
Super Bomberman: Panic Bomber W (SNES)
Super Bomberman 5 (SNES, incomplete)
Saturn Bomberman Fight!! (Saturn)
Bomberman Wars (Saturn)
BB-Daman Bakugaiden: Victory heno Michi (GBC)
BB-Daman Bakugaiden V: Final Mega Tune (GBC)
Bomberman Land (PSX)
Bomberman Land 2 (PS2, GC)
Bomberman Land 3 (PS2)
Bomberman Kart (PS2)
Bomberman Kart DX (PS2)
Bomberman Jetters: Legendary Bomberman (GBA)
Bomberman Jetters Game Collection (GBA)
Panic Bomber (PSP)
Bomberman: Bakufuu Sentai Bomberman (PSP)
Bomberman Blast JP (Wii)
The translator for BMJ Episode 53 and both Bakugaiden IV & V is open to working on these games as well, so what legato is primarily looking for are people who can:
Rip text from the games
Put any translated text back into a patch
Playtest for typos, corrections, etc.
Provide additional help checking translations for accuracy
For more information, check out the forum thread here. If you're interested in helping out, you can:
Make a BombermanBoard account and post in the thread about what you can do (which would probably be easier for legato to track but is possibly antithetical to the younger bombs in the fandom), or...
Message this account with a name, method of contact (an email address or otherwise some sort of social media with DM/PM capabilities), and what you can offer for the project so I can post in the thread in your stead
For the record, games that have already been translated (not by legato!) include:
Bomberman GB 3
Super Bomberman 4
Bomberman Warz (PSX)
Bomberman 64 Arcade Edition
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shinigami-striker · 2 months
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55 Konami Games I Can Name | Thursday, 03.20.24
Barring compilations, free-to-play titles, and remakes, these are the 55 Konami titles that I could find and name to celebrate the 55th anniversary of their establishment as a Japanese video game company known for developing and publishing over 1,000 video games since its conception in 1969 (exactly 55 years ago).
Titles:
1978
Block Game (Arcade)
1981
Frogger (Arcade)
1982
Pooyan (Arcade)
1985
Gradius (Arcade)
1986
Vs. Gradius (Arcade)
1987
Castlevania (1987 video game) (NES)
Contra (Arcade)
Top Gun (NES)
1988
Castlevania II: Simon's Quest (NES)
Super Contra (Arcade)
1989
Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles (1989 video game) (NES)
Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles: The Arcade Game (Arcade)
1990
Metal Gear 2: Solid Snake (MSX)
Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles II: The Arcade Game (NES)
1991
Super Castlevania IV (SNES)
Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles: Turtles in Time (Arcade)
1992
Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles III: The Manhattan Project (NES)
Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles IV: Turtles in Time (SNES)
Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles: The Hyperstone Heist (Sega Genesis)
1993
Rocket Knight Adventures (Sega Genesis)
Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles: Tournament Fighters (Sega Genesis/SNES)
1994
Sparkster (SNES)
Sparkster: Rocket Knight Adventures 2 (Sega Genesis)
1998
Mystical Ninja starring Goemon (N64)
Metal Gear Solid (1998 video game) (PlayStation)
1999
Goemon's Greatest Adventure (N64)
2001
Dance Dance Revolution (video game) (PlayStation)
Konami Krazy Racers (GBA)
Silent Hill 2 (PS2)
Metal Gear Solid 2: Sons of Liberty (PS2)
2002
Metal Gear Solid 2: Substance (Xbox)
2003
Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles (2003) (home console versions) (Nintendo GameCube/PC/PS2/Xbox)
2004
Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles 2: Battle Nexus (Game Boy Advance/GameCube/PS2/Xbox)
Metal Gear Solid 3: Snake Eater (PS2)
2005
TMNT: Mutant Melee (GameCube/PS2 (Europe only)/Xbox)
Frogger: Ancient Shadow (GameCube/PS2/Xbox)
Dance Dance Revolution: Mario Mix (Nintendo GameCube)
Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles 3: Mutant Nightmare (Nintendo DS/Nintendo GameCube/PS2/Xbox)
2006
Bomberman Legacy (PSP)
2007
MLB Power Pros (PS2/Wii)
2008
MLB Power Pros 2008 (Nintendo DS/PS2/Wii)
2010
Rocket Knight (2010 video game) (Microsoft Windows/PS3/Xbox 360)
2013
Metal Gear Rising: Revengeance (Microsoft Windows/PS3/Xbox 360)
2014
Metal Gear Solid V: Ground Zeroes (Microsoft Windows/PS3/PS4/Xbox 360/Xbox One)
2015
Metal Gear Solid V: The Phantom Pain (Microsoft Windows/PS3/PS4/Xbox 360/Xbox One)
2016
Vs. Bomberman (iOS)
2017
Super Bomberman R (Microsoft Windows/Nintendo Switch/PS4/Xbox One)
Pro Evolution Soccer 2018 (Microsoft Windows/PS3/PS4/Xbox 360/Xbox One)
2018
Zone of the Enders: The 2nd Runner MARS (PC/PS4)
2019
eFootball PES 2020 (Android/iOS/PC/PS4/Xbox One)
Frogger in Toy Town (iOS)
2020
Skelattack (Microsoft Windows/Nintendo Switch/PS4/Xbox One)
2023
Super Bomberman R 2 (Microsoft Windows/Nintendo Switch/PS4/PS5/Xbox One/ Xbox Series X | S)
Super Crazy Rhythm Castle (Microsoft Windows/Nintendo Switch/PS4/PS5/Xbox One/Xbox Series X | S)
2024
Silent Hill: The Short Message (PlayStation 5)
And that's the 55 Konami games I know.
Happy 55th anniversary, Konami! Thank you for you continuing contributions in the world of video games! 🎂
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glassmarcus · 3 months
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Konami gave me an excuse to write about the trajectory of Bomberman campaigns
*Played in November 2023, Written in December 2023
For those who know me, it’s apparent that I’m one of those deviants who plays Bomberman games FOR the story mode. We’ve all played multiplayer Bomberman games, and we all had a blast doing so (Pun intended, the pun will always be intended). Multiplayer Bomberman just works and as long as you don’t fuck it up, it guarantees a Bomberman game is at least a 7/10 if you staple it to the side of any of them. It is pure distilled chaos in its most enjoyable form. But it’s also kind of perfected at this point. Yea, you can add a few more mechanics and characters to play at once, but nothing you can do really changes the feelings that multiplayer elicits. That’s why Single Player modes have always been more intriguing to me. There’s so much potential there, and every few games there’s a new take on the gameplay that could be pushed a little bit further.
Bomberman started out as a Single Player home computer game. The goal was to erradicate the enemies on the screen and then proceed to the next level. This became the default Bomberman Single Player format and didn’t die out until Bomberman Portable on the PSP. In fact it was basically the only gameplay type for a decade. I refer to this style of gameplay as “Genocide” as the goal is to completely clear out the map with no exception. It is the most plentiful Single Player mode and has honestly run its course. Having the goal be to kill every enemy really pins down what the level design and objectives have to be and just ends up dragging out the content. It was probably done the best in Super Bomberman 4 and by then the other gameplay types it created were inherently more interesting, so it was weird that they kept making them for a decade afterwards. There are many more types of Bomberman Single Player modes, and I’m about to break em down and bestow a title corresponding to whatever crime can best describe them.
After Multiplayer modes started getting added to Bomberman games, they pretty much took over the franchise and became the focus going forward. Some games decided to take the Multiplayer and pass it as a Single Player experience by pitting you against AI opponents. This gameplay type I refer to as “Homicide” as it focuses on killing players who have the same abilities as you. The first one to do this was Bomberman Gameboy, also known as Wario Blast in North America. Why is it called Wario Blast? Because they added Wario as a playable character and opponent. Why did they do that? I...I don’t have any answers for that. It still puzzles me to this day.
Homicide is far and away the worst Gameplay type for Single Player Bomberman games. Single Player Bomberman is fun because it’s for the most part Asymmetric. Multiplayer is fun because everyone is on the same level and has to navigate through the same chaos. These games take the worst of both worlds. The inherent equality is stripped from you as you’re forced to play with at least one AI opponent who will dodge every one of your bombs flawlessly, yet will accidentally kill themselves 80% of the time. Defeating them is not satisfying because it always feels like there’s no behavior or strategy you had to learn in order to win, you got lucky because the AI decided not to read your inputs or blow themselves up. And this is all in exchange of potentially great level layouts, varied enemy design, and a genuine feeling of progression. I don’t say this a lot, because I try to appreciate the hands I'm dealt with in life, but I’d truly rather have nothing.
Around the same time as the Homicide gameplay type was created, Bomberman 94 for the Turbo Grafx 16 blessed the world with a new style as well. Instead of the goal being to kill every enemy on the screen, it was to destroy certain enemy structures to open the exit of the level. Due to the goal being shifted to destruction of objects rather than enemies, I title this style as “Property Damage”. I’m a big fan of Property Damage. It gives you more options for how to handle the level now that you don’t have to kill every single thing on the map. Having certain points that the player must travel to allows for more creative map design as well.
It’s a better version of the Genocide gameplay style in every way. Super Bomberman 4 is a dynamite game on in a vacuum, but was ultimately disappointing because Super Bomberman 3 was a Property Damage Game. I would say the gameplay in Super Bomberman 4 is a step up from 3, but its inferior structure drags it down. Property Damage is the best gameplay style that I don’t have a desire to see again. I earnestly believe the formula was perfected in Saturn Bomberman, Aka The Best Bomberman Game. After playing it I was truly satisfied. They don’t need to go back to this well again, just re-release it on modern hardware. It’s the definitive Classic Bomberman Experience.
Not all styles can be as fully realized as Property Damage though. I think the most known gameplay style that fans clamor to make a comeback for is what I’ve come to refer to as “Loitering”. This is the gameplay style created by the N64 Bomberman Games. There is no specific requirement to unlock the exit, you only have to figure out how to get to it while goofing off on the way there. Adventure is the main focus and while all these games have had their problems, they were all solvable problems. A truly amazing Bomberman title is waiting to be made under the Loitering frame work.
Bomberman 64 has some undeniably gilded level design and is an impressive first attempt at a 3D Bomberman game. It frustrates the hell out me when I play it because of the camera and how stupid punishing it is, but that can all be fixed in a follow up or remake. I can say the same for every game of this style. Bomberman Hero would be amazing if it had a slight double jump action to spruce up movement. Bomberman 64: The Second Attack might become one of the best Bomberman Games if it explained and utilized its mechanics with a hint of sanity. Bomberman Generation has the least problems out of any 3D Bomberman game, but feels a bit sterile and safe compared to its predecessors. I’d love to see a version of the game with more open and creative levels. Bomberman Jetters...is a lost cause, but 80% of them are still bursting with potential. I’d prefer they return to this style, but due to it being the most resource intensive option, I doubt that will happen.
Over the years, Konami/Hudsoft has occasionally opted to lean towards somewhat of a fusion of the Property Damage and Genocide archetypes. Games where instead of the objective being to destroy an amount of enemies or objects, the objective differs in every level. This assures variety in level structure and gameplay and it’s basically what I expect Bomberman story modes to be at a bare minimum now. When Super Bomberman R came out and had this gameplay type in place, It felt as if that was the story mode that won out in the end after years of evolution. It’s not my favorite style, but “Crime Spree” felt like the future to me and I fully expected Super Bomberman R 2 to follow suit. The frame work had to be similar to classic Bomberman due to being a sequel to R, so the Loitering games I pined for were assuredly not going to return. The most I could hope for was a Bomberman Blast Story mode scenario where it’s still top down gameplay but with linear levels. Of course there are more options for the series to return to, but I deem those as even less likely. But that won’t stop me from writing about them though.
I will never not be salty about the fate of the Top Down Bomberman Adventure games. This series is at it’s best and most interesting when it’s shamelessly emulating The Legend of Zelda and I wholehearted wish they leaned in harder. Bomberman Quest is a wonderful game buried by a mountain of embarrassing technical issues. The bombs are literally transparency.jpgs and it’s the funniest shit I’ve ever seen. This game is barely held together, but traversing the world at your leisure and finding new abilities to use just feels right for the series. Its Gameboy Advance follow up, Bomberman Tournament is hands down one of the best games in the franchise because it cribs even more from Zelda including the tendency for Zelda games to perform decently. Tournament is the best Zelda game on the GBA, hands down. And this sub series peaks here, as its only follow up was Bomberman Story DS, which is a bad game I don’t want to talk about because it makes me VERY angry.
There’s a quality to Bomberman that lends itself to collection and exploration more than other franchises. I think it’s due to the work you put in to collecting and clearing out an area. Most adventure games have you travel to a place, do a quest, and then you have what you need for your quest. In Bomberman though, you have to do those same things...without accidentally killing yourself. It feels a bit more earned and exciting that way. Blasting the land and fracking resources fills me with glee, and that glee is all the better when those power ups and rewards are permanent. This is why I call this gameplay type “Looting”. The tools you acquire have lasting impact on your journey and a lot of the fun is indulging in the grind.
Now there are tons of other gameplay types that I don’t expect to return in any way because they are very unconventional for Bomberman gameplay and are essentially spin offs. I say essentially and not definitely in this case because I don’t know how to split a franchise as unfocused as this one into mainline and spin off categories. Basically, when the gameplay strongly diverges from the norm is when I don’t expect any return. So all those Bomberman Racing games that came out are irrelevant, as well as the Bomberman Land party games. But there is one spin off that I feel doesn’t stray from the norm too much and I still have some hope it can return in a future game. In the past we’ve had Genocide and Homicide, but neither of these crimes comes close to one of my favorite Gameplay Styles: “Regicide”.
Bomberman Wars is a goddamned gem of a strategy game that doesn’t deserve to be stuck on the Japanese PSX catalog. Many games back in the day didn’t get localized because they were too hard or didn’t have a tone that appealed to target demographics enough. This one I’m pretty sure was held back because they thought Americans simply weren’t smart enough. My brain was forced to expand when I played this game. If you don’t think 4 steps ahead at least, you can lose it all in a mere instant. Understanding each unit on the map and their function is key to victory and when you execute your assassination plan of the opposing team’s king, it's euphoric. The thing is, it’s still Bomberman gameplay. Only now it’s turn based. Bomberman games being on a grid makes it convert into a strategy game seamlessly. It’s not a strategy game with a Bomberman coat of paint; It’s a Bomberman game that is slowed down so you can plan for all the chaos that a 5 v 5 Bomberman match might entail. It might never come to the forefront of the franchise, but I believe that if the balance of Bomberman Wars is ironed out, we will have created Chess 2. I regret to inform you that these last two paragraphs are irrelevant to the main point of this write up and my motive was to gush about Bomberman Wars.
So with all this knowledge of Bomberman gameplay, I came into the newly released Super Bomberman R 2 fully expecting a Crime Spree game. There was no reason for it to not be that. But to my surprise...Konami cooked up something entirely different. To be fair the original Super Bomberman series shook things up a bit too between games. Sure, Super Bomberman 2 is pretty much the same as the first, but 3 shook things up by being a Property Damage game, 4 added mechanics that added value to the genocide gameplay style, and Super Bomberman 5 set itself apart by being a completely impenetrable cluster fuck. So there is precedent set in the series they are attempting to reboot, but not to this extent. When you boot up Super Bomberman R 2, you are not greeted with a mission to complete. You are not tasked with an object to destroy. You aren’t even given a hit list on who to kill. Because Super Bomberman R2 is a Looting game.
Now, it’s not a Looter the same way the previous 3 games are. You don’t get any unique abilities or bombs along the way which is a huge bummer. But by following the description I gave earlier, this clearly fits. The whole game is centered around collecting. You bomb softblocks and enemies to gain experience points which grant you basic power ups that last for the entire world. It’s not much, but it is an RPG mechanic and I’ll take all I can get. Exploration is at the forefront of story mode, as your objective is to comb the area and search for alien creatures called Ellons. Ellons look similar to Chao and have the same surface level appeal. They even have a discount Chao Garden on each planet you visit. But mechanically they work much more like Maiamais from The Legend of Zelda: Link Between Worlds. Each planet is gerrymandered into districts that have a certain amount of Ellons. Ellons are hidden all over the place and their locations can be sussed out by listening to their squeaks in the distance. When a district has all of it’s Ellons collected, it will be indicated on the map, and each Planet has 100 total. These are functionally Maiamais and again I must praise Bomberman for shameless cribbing off Zelda. This aspect of the gameplay loop shoots this game up to being one of my favorite Bomberman Campaigns.
Find a bunch of collectibles in an open world with no direction? I sleep. Find a moderate amount of collectibles in a series of divided areas? You have my undivided attention. Completing each section one by one hits that anxious spot in my brain real nice because once I’ve completed a section, I don’t have to worry about it again. More games need to do this and I’m glad Bomberman caught on. It also helps that searching for them in soft blocks isn’t the only way to obtain Ellons. There are also small puzzles and mini challenges you find throughout the level that award you with multiple Ellons at a time. Bomberman Story DS had puzzles like this too, but I’m pretty sure they were all awful. I can’t be sure, I prefer to not remember that game. The puzzles add a lot to the gameplay loop so it never feels stale. It would get tiring if the entire game was blasting soft blocks to find Chao and level up stats. What’s interesting about this stat element is that it’s not simply the standard fire, speed, and bomb amounts that increase. After a while, your gimmick maximum increases too, which is a stat that doesn’t appear to be relevant to the story mode at all.
As it turns out, this Story Mode is only half of a Looting game. The other half is comprised of a new gameplay type. One of the main selling points of Super Bomberman R2 was a new multiplayer mode that involved some sort of tower defense. The way it works is that there are two teams, one defending their treasures and another attempting to steal them. When time runs out and the defending team still has treasures left, they win. If the invading team successfully captures all the treasures before the time runs out, they win. This game mode in implemented into the Single Player campaign using AI opponents with some twist. Now, based on my feelings on Homicide style Bomberman games, this seems like something I’d hate. It’s a chaotic multiplayer mode being slapped onto the Single Player. But there are a few things about this implementation that make it not only work, but be a really fun experience.
My main issues with the Homicide Bomberman games was how there was no asymmetry and the AI were a little too slick at times. This is not a problem here. For one, the AI opponents are kinda dumb compared to previous titles, which I’m not sure was the intention, but I appreciate it at points. There is also no issue with symmetry, as this game mode is inherently asymmetrical. When you are on defense, you have the entire map working in your favor as you can adjust the fortress design to funnel enemies into traps(gimmicks) that push them away from the objective or kill them. You can also achieve special abilities such as a sword that kills enemies directly or a shield that takes a certain amount of hits. When you are on the invading side, you don’t have a lot going for you aside from numbers. Sure you’re likelier to die, but there are far more invaders than defenders. Because you don’t need to be stronger than the opposing side to win, you only need to be sneaky and clever with how you move around the fortress. While Looting also wouldn’t be a bad term for this gameplay type, due to both defense and offense being required, I think “Home Invasion” fits better.
For Home Invasion’s first outing it doesn’t do too shabby. The gimmicks and gimmick limits you obtain and increase throughout story mode allow you to bolster your defenses whenever enemies attempt to raid you. It’s hilarious to build your own fortress and watch the opposing forces fail to navigate your house of horrors. A lot of the time I felt like I was just blocking enemy paths with bombs though, so maybe the AI could have stood to be a little smarter. On the invading side of things where you have to take the enemy’s treasure, many elements don’t transfer over perfectly. You are on a team of 8, but they aren’t really your team. There is a single treasure to steal when you play in story mode and if you aren’t the one who steals it, you lose. White Bomberman has to be the main character. I think the idea was to assure the player character didn’t stand still and wait for the AI to maybe take care of the problem. Instead of an 8 v 3 it ends up being a 1 v 10, which isn’t even a challenge anyway. Most matches last 30 seconds if you know where the treasure actually is. The raiding side of things feels half baked and it’s really disappointing how you have to compete with your siblings instead of work with them.
One big change Super Bomberman R made was reestablish lore and make all the Bombermen be siblings with distinct personalities and I’m still not sure I’m a fan of this decision. While it’s great they are distinct, they can also get very annoying. There’s not a ton of story in this game, so they are all fighting for screen time due to 8 characters being an absurdly high number for a main cast. I think the story of this game integrates the individual characters better into the plot, but a lot of the time they do often come off as White Bomberman’s wacky side kicks. On the first invasion I did, I was kinda hyped to see all the Bomberman siblings together about to wreak havoc. They actually felt like a team. For a split second. Then you realize they are only getting in your way. I couldn’t help but imagine how cool it would be if these characters had their own little gameplay segments or maybe individual campaigns. Maybe then they could be cured of the annoying sidekick syndrome they’ve been bedridden with for 2 games. I desperately want to be endeared to these characters, but this game isn’t built for that. For as ambitious as it is, it’s only ambitious compared to the past few story modes.
I really need Konami to make the next Bomberman Story Mode with a budget. Aside from some qualms I have with the raiding side of Home Invasion, all issues with the game stem from a suffocation of new assets. You explore 3 planets in this game, which mean only 3 motifs. That’s on the lower end of Bomberman Games. 5 motifs is the expected minimum. While I never tired of the gameplay, I did tire of the visuals after a while. 3 Planets means only 3 over world themes, and while they do good to provide multiple mixes of those themes, that means there’s only 3 unique melodies for the majority of the campaign. It’s not even half as many as its predecessor. Sadly, I’ll take the soundtrack of the first game over this one any day. Asset diversity is the one thing I feel R1 completely trumps its sequel in.
3 planets also means a limited number of bosses. The Boss fights in this game have the quality and bombast I desire from this series. Well the third one is kinda bad, the rest are pretty great. There are clear patterns the boss goes through and the better you are at reading the boss and knowing what their openings and weak points are, the faster you can finish the fight. But because the story wants to do a cool finale with a multi-phase final boss fight, they decide to throw in a boss rush instead of a what they clearly wanted to do. It’s a bit deflating to have to slog through all these past bosses to get to the new content which there isn’t much of. And it’s shame because I was actually a bit invested in this villain’s motive and the lore they built here.
This Home Invasion Looter hybrid feels like a promising proof of concept for the future of the franchise, but I’m not confident it will be followed through. I don’t think this game is gonna sell as well as Konami wants it to, so it might be a while for an R3 to happen. But even after enjoying what they created, I would still prefer they make a pure Looting or Loitering type story mode next. I’m mainly just happy this team is trying new things. While Home Invasion has potential, it’s not the end of the world if it isn’t followed up on. But this game has really convinced me of something that I’ve always known deep down.
I can’t hide it anymore. I just want Bomberman to become the new Zelda. I’m not kidding. For a decade I have hungered for a new traditional Zelda game and Nintendo seems to have no plans for making them. I’m playing through The Legend of Zelda: Tears of the Kingdom savoring every morsel of traditional Zelda shavings it leaves behind, but it’s not enough. If you’re ever curious why I’m obsessed with this franchise, it’s because I’m a Zelda fan who is projecting. There has been a lonely rift in gaming for years now and it’s begging to be mended. Bomberman can fill that spot, I promise. Look at the level design in Bomberman 64: The Second Attack. Some of those are straight up Zelda dungeons! Tournament is the second best Bomberman game because it thinks it’s a Zelda game. The potential has always been there and I binged 40 Bomberman games in 2021 to see if there was anything else in the franchise that pushed the concepts those games introduced further. But I found nothing but a pile of mezzanine single player modes, a few gems, and Saturn Bomberman, the Best game I will never play again because Saturn Emulation is a nightmare.
Because Bomberman is such an unfocused franchise and because its multiplayer has subsumed its identity, I know it’s just not gonna happen. But the heart wants what the heart wants. My heart wants a different type of bomb in each dungeon that you use to solve complex puzzles. My heart wants consistent lore and culture between games. My heart wants a sick Rival Boss Fight between Max and Bomberman. My heart wants to use Louies and Tirras as mounts as you roam the overworld. My heart wants to place a bomb on a suspicious wall and find a secret, because that’s what both franchises are really about at the end of the day. Maybe my brain is still fried from the Great Bomber Binge of 2021, but I really do think this makes sense. This franchise has been around for over 40 years, yet feels like it never truly exploded. But it’s not too late Bomberman. The mantle is yours to take. Seek the throne, for it is now empty and calling out to you.
Anyway, here’s a diagram of all the categories I’ve divided the games I’m familiar with into. You’re Welcome.
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owlixx · 1 year
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GBA Wishlist
Okay so I’m thinking about picking up a GBA so I can play those games on a real console instead of emulated. I had a silver and then a blue GBA SP as a kid. I’m torn between a modded original GBA or an SP, especially the triforce design. Anyways, I wanted to list some games I’d actually play on a GBA and figured I might as well post it online to look back on later, not sure if the notes will even make sense to anyone but me. Feel free to add recommendations. Also I had so much fun making this list that I’m thinking about going through and doing a similar list for the DS, 3DS, GameCube (on my WiiU), Wii (on my Wii U), Wii U, PS3, PS1 (on my PS3 or Vita), Vita, PSP (on my Vita) since those are the consoles I can currently play on original (or close enough) hardware.
Big hitters:
* Advance wars - 1 and 2, never really tucked into them past the tutorial before and having a real GBA would really force me to take them nice and slow.
* Fire emblem - multiple, I could even grab a fan tran of FE6
* Drill dozer - doubt I’d have rumble on a flash cart but this would have a lot more charm on a physical gba
* Pokémon mystery dungeon - again, I think I’d have more patience with this slow game on a real gba
* Chain of memories - been meaning to play this anyways
* FF5-6 patched - fan patched because of the audio, but I think these have exclusive content on a GBA vs snes/ps1 and I wanna play these games on a non-modern screen
* FF Tactics Advance - again, just feels more charming on a small screen
* MM battle network - been meaning to play these anyways
* NES Classics - not the best way to play these games, but kind of a novelty
* Super Mario advance 1-4 - would be so funny to play the Wii U rom of SMA4, but also I grew up with that game
* Kuru Kuru Kururin - always one I use to test a new emulator setup, easy fun
* Tony Hawk - had a recent Tony Hawk phase, these ones are supposed to be good
* Doom - novelty
* Game and watch gallery 4 - great for testing/pick up and play
* F zero/Mario kart - again, very pick up and play
* Mario golf advance tour - loved the gba Mario tennis and I should play this one too
* Wario Land 4 - had a wario land phase recently and stopped mid-3
* Golden Sun - I did actually do the first hour or so on Wii U but this game belongs on handheld
* Warioware - the definition of pick up and play
* Minish Cap - I feel like this game is good enough to be worth playing removed from the original console so it’s doubly worth playing on a real one
* Mother 3 - Cmon, this one is a gimme. Playing the fan Tran on a real GBA would be such an own on Nintendo
Lesser:
* Swordcraft Story - started this on vita, pretty cute
* Banjo Kazooie/Pilot - because I played nuts and bolts as a kid
* Bit generations - don’t have the ROM’s currently but I love a simple game
* Boktai - patched for the sensor but cmon it’s Hideo
* Bomberman - they made so many of these for GBA
* Bookworm - I’m a simple man
* Car battler joe - I always see this mentioned
* Starfy - fan trans
* Various SNES ports (DKC) - I had DKC as a kid but also there’s sooo many snes ports
* Dr Mario & Puzzle League - pick up and play
* Yugioh - I had one as a kid and got into these recently
* GTA - I think this one is a GTA3 prequel?
* Various fighting games (MK, GG, Tekken, SF) - novelty
* Jet grind radio - even if just for the music
* Finding Nemo - had as kid
* Lady Sia - seen on lists
* Sabrewulf - rare! And seen on lists
* That one xcom game (rebelstar) - I mean, I do like xcom
* LttP - never played it, I should look up version differences first
* Lego Star Wars - had as kid
* Return of the king - seen on lists, seems better than it should be
* Magical vacation - fan Tran, from Hazel’s video
* Pac-Man - various here, pick up and play
* Polarium - polarium DS is cute
* Puyo - pick up and play
* Zone of the Enders - I’ve been meaning to play this and the 2 main games
* Denki blocks - cute puzzle game
* Gunstar super heroes - kind of a shmup, I stan treasure honestly
* Sword of mana - I think this is a remake of the first game? So it’s safe to start here?
* Sigma star saga - read about this in Nintendo power as a kid, seems like a shmup rpg hybrid
* Hamtaro - nobody will shut up about how good this game is for some reason
* Pinball of the dead - seen this one praised a few times
* Chu chu rocket - I wasn’t convinced until I saw that it had 2500 user created levels
* Tactics Ogre - surprised to see this so high on metacritic when I didn’t know it existed before
* Ninja Five O - no one will shut up about this game
* Various racing games
* Asterisk and obelisk XL - impressively 3D
* Harvest moon - maybe the tiny screen will finally convince me to have the patience to farm
* Activision Anthology - again, just for the novelty
Replay:
* 3 Castlevanias - only actually beat Aria
* Mega Man Zero - hard, maybe too hard
* Sonic Advance 1-3 - had 3 as kid, love these
* Kirby - didn’t beat amazing mirror, wouldn’t mind trying to 100% nightmare
* Metroid Zero Mission/Fusion - classics. Perfection.
* Pokémon RSE/FRLG - always due for a replay
* Pokémon pinball - my go to testing game
* Mario tennis power tour - never did beat hard mode. And it’s been a while
* Mario Vs donkey kong - played as kid
* Klonoa - very pick up and play
2 notes · View notes
thelaststarman · 2 years
Text
My list of games
Here are the list of games I have on my emulator (OpenEmu).
Finished games in green, games I'm currently playing in blue, games I haven't started yet in red.
*has Amiga, MS-DOS, PS2, Dreamcast or Xbox instalments I can't get yet
A/N: I use Save States.
NES = Nintendo Entertainment System
FC = Famicom
FDS = Famicom Disk System
GB = Game Boy
GBC = Game Boy Colour
SNES = Super Nintendo Entertainment System
SFC = Super Famicom
GG = Sega Game Gear
GEN = Sega Genesis/Mega Drive
MCD = Sega CD
32X = Sega 32X
SAT = Sega Saturn
N64 = Nintendo 64
PSX = PlayStation
WS = WonderSwan
NGP = NeoGeo Pocket
GBA = Game Boy Advance
GCN = Nintendo GameCube
NDS = Nintendo DS
PSP = PlayStation Portable
List of games
Ace Attorney
Phoenix Wright: Ace Attorney (NDS)
Phoenix Wright: Ace Attorney - Justice for All (NDS)
Phoenix Wright: Ace Attorney - Trials and Tribulations (NDS)
Apollo Justice: Ace Attorney (NDS)
Ace Attorney Investigations: Miles Edgeworth (NDS)
Ace Attorney Investigations: Miles Edgeworth 2 (NDS)
ActRaiser
ActRaiser (SNES)
ActRaiser 2 (SNES)
Aleste
Musha Aleste (GEN)
GG Aleste (GG)
Super Aleste (SNES)
Robo Aleste (MCD)
GG Aleste II (GG)
Alundra
Alundra (PSX)
Alundra 2: A New Legend Begins (PSX)
Bangai-O
Bangai-O (N64)
Bangai-O Spirits (NDS)
Banjo-Kazooie
Banjo-Kazooie (N64)
Banjo-Tooie (N64)
Battletoads
Battletoads (NES)
Battletoads in Battlemaniacs (SNES)
Blaster Master
Blaster Master (NES)
Blaster Master Jr (GB)
Blaster Master 2 (GEN)
Blaster Master: Enemy Below (GBC)
BlazBlue
BlazBlue: Calamity Trigger (PSP)
BlazBlue: Continuum Shift II (PSP)
Boktai
Boktai 1: The Sun Is In Your Hand (GBA)
Boktai 2: Solar Boy Django (GBA)
Boktai 3: Sabata's Counterattack (GBA)
Lunar Knights (NDS)
Bomberman
Super Bomberman (SNES)
Super Bomberman 2 (SNES)
Super Bomberman 3 (SNES)
Super Bomberman 4 (SFC)
Super Bomberman 5 (SFC)
Bomberman 64 (N64)
Bomberman 64: The Second Attack! (N64)
Bomberman Hero (N64)
Bomberman Max: Blue Champion/Red Challenger (GBC)
Bomberman Max 2: Blue/Red Advance (GBA)
Breath of Fire
Breath of Fire (GBA)
Breath of Fire II (SNES)
Breath of Fire III (PSX)
Breath of Fire IV (PSX)
Burnout*
Burnout (GCN)
Burnout 2: Point of Impact (GCN)
Burnout Legends (PSP)
Burnout Dominator (PSP)
Castlevania*
Castlevania (NES)
Castlevania III: Dracula's Curse (NES)
Super Castlevania IV (SNES)
Castlevania: Rondo of Blood (TurboGrafx-CD)
Castlevania: Bloodlines (GEN)
Castlevania: Dracula X (SNES)
Castlevania: Symphony of the Night (PSX)
Castlevania: Legacy of Darkness (N64)
Castlevania Chronicles (PSX)
Castlevania: Circle of the Moon (GBA)
Castlevania: Harmony of Dissonance (GBA)
Castlevania: Aria of Sorrow (GBA)
Castlevania: Dawn of Sorrow (NDS)
Castlevania: Portrait of Ruin (NDS)
Castlevania: Order of Ecclesia (NDS)
Chibi-Robo
Chibi-Robo!: Park Patrol (NDS)
Okaeri! Chibi-Robo!: Happy Rich Oosouji! (NDS)
Chrono
Chrono Trigger (SNES)
Radical Dreamers (SNES)
Chrono Cross (PSX)
Clock Tower*
Clock Tower: The First Fear (SFC)
Clock Tower (PSX)
Contra*
Contra (NES)
Super Contra (NES)
Contra III: The Alien Wars (SNES)
Contra: Hard Corps (GEN)
Contra 4 (NDS)
Crash Bandicoot*
Crash Bandicoot (PSX)
Crash Bandicoot 2: Cortex Strikes Back (PSX)
Crash Bandicoot 3: Warped (PSX)
Crash Bash (PSX)
Custom Robo
Custom Robo (N64)
Custom Robo (GCN)
Custom Robo Arena (NDS)
Destruction Derby
Destruction Derby (PSX)
Destruction Derby 2 (PSX)
Die Hard
Die Hard Trilogy (PSX)
Dino Crisis
Dino Crisis (PSX)
Dino Crisis 2 (PSX)
Disgaea
Disgaea: Afternoon of Darkness (PSP)
Disgaea 2: Dark Hero Days (PSP)
Disgaea DS (NDS)
Disgaea Infinite (PSP)
Disney*
QuackShot Starring Donald Duck (GEN)
World of Illusion Starring Mickey Mouse and Donald Duck (GEN)
The Magical Quest Starring Mickey Mouse (SNES)
The Great Circus Mystery Starring Mickey & Minnie (SNES)
Disney's Magical Quest 3 Starring Mickey & Donald (SFC)
Mickey Mania (MCD)
Dragon Quest*
Dragon Quest I & II (SFC)
Dragon Quest III (SNES)
Dragon Quest IV: Chapters of the Chosen (NDS)
Dragon Quest V (SFC)
Dragon Quest V: Hand of the Heavenly Bride (NDS)
Dragon Quest VI (SFC)
Dragon Quest VI: Realms of Revelation (NDS)
Dragon Quest VII (PSX)
Dragon Quest IX: Sentinels of the Starry Skies (NDS)
Driver*
Driver (PSX)
Driver 2 (PSX)
Donkey Kong
Donkey Kong Country (SNES)
Donkey Kong Country 2: Diddy's Kong Quest (SNES)
Donkey Kong Country 3: Dixie Kong's Double Trouble! (SNES)
Donkey Kong 64 (N64)
Duke Nukem*
Duke Nukem 64 (N64)
Earthbound/Mother
Earthbound Beginnings (NES)
Earthbound (SNES)
Mother 3 (GBA)
Earthworm Jim
Earthworm Jim (GEN)
Earthworm Jim 2 (SAT)
Ecco the Dolphin
Ecco the Dolphin (GEN)
Ecco the Dolphin: The Tides of Time (GEN)
Enix*
Soul Blazer (SNES)
E.V.O. Search for Eden (SNES)
Ogre Battle: The March of the Black Queen (SNES)
The 7th Saga (SNES)
Illusion of Gaia (SNES)
Brain Lord (SNES)
Robotrek (SNES)
Wonder Project J (SFC)
Mystic Ark (SFC)
Terranigma (SNES)
Dark Half (SFC)
Final Fantasy*
Final Fantasy I & II: Dawn of Souls (GBA)
Final Fantasy III (NDS)
Final Fantasy IV: The Complete Collection (PSP) - Final Fantasy IV, Final Fantasy IV: Interlude, Final Fantasy IV: The After Years
Final Fantasy IV (NDS)
Final Fantasy V (SFC) + Spoof Mod
Final Fantasy VI (SNES)
Final Fantasy VII (PSX)
Final Fantasy VIII (PSX)
Final Fantasy IX (PSX)
Final Fantasy Tactics (PSX)
Final Fantasy Tactics Advance (GBA)
Final Fantasy A2: Grimoire of the Rift (NDS)
Final Fantasy: Crystal Chronicles (GCN)
Final Fantasy Crystal Chronicles: Rings of Fate (DS)
Final Fantasy Crystal Chronicles: Echoes of Time (DS)
Final Fantasy: The 4 Heroes of Light (DS)
Final Fantasy XII: Revenant Wings (NDS)
Dissidia 012: Duodecim Final Fantasy (PSP)
Final Fight
Final Fight CD (MCD)
Final Fight 2 (SNES)
Final Fight 3 (SNES)
Final Fight Revenge (SAT)
Fire Emblem
Fire Emblem: Shadow Dragon and the Blade of Light (FC)
Fire Emblem Gaiden (FC)
Fire Emblem: Mystery of the Emblem (SFC)
Fire Emblem: Genealogy of the Holy War (SFC)
Fire Emblem: Thracia 776 (SFC)
Fire Emblem: The Binding Blade (GBA)
Fire Emblem: The Blazing Blade (GBA)
Fire Emblem: The Sacred Stones (GBA)
Fire Emblem: Path of Radiance (GCN)
Fossil Fighters
Fossil Fighters (NDS)
Fossil Fighters Champions (NDS)
F-Zero
F-Zero (SNES)
F-Zero X (N64)
F-Zero: Maximum Velocity (GBA)
F-Zero Climax (GBA)
Gargoyle's Quest
Gargoyle's Quest (GB)
Gargoyle's Quest II: The Demon Darkness (GB)
Demon's Crest (SNES)
Gex
Gex (PSX)
Gex: Enter the Gecko (PSX)
Gex 3: Deep Cover Gecko (PSX)
Ghosts'n Goblins
Ghosts'n Goblins (NES)
Ghouls'n Ghosts (GEN)
Super Ghouls'n Ghosts (SNES)
Glory of Heracles
Legend of the Fighting Demon's Lair: Glory of Heracles (FC)
The Glory of Heracles II: Titan's Downfall (FC)
The Glory of Heracles III: Silence of the Gods (SFC)
The Glory of Heracles IV: Gift from the Gods (SFC)
The Glory of Heracles: Snap Story (GB)
Glory of Heracles (NDS)
Goemon
Legend of the Mystical Ninja (SNES)
Mystical Ninja Starring Goemon (N64)
Goemon's Great Adventure (N64)
Golden Sun
Golden Sun (GBA)
Golden Sun: The Lost Age (GBA)
Gradius/Salamander*
Gradius (NES)
Salamander (TurboGrafx-16)
Gradius III (SNES)
Gradius Portable (PSP) - Gradius, Gradius II, Gradius III, Gradius IV, Gradius Gaiden
Guilty Gear*
Guilty Gear (PSX)
Gunstar Heroes
Gunstar Heroes (GEN)
Gunstar Super Heroes (GBA)
Joe & Mac
Joe & Mac (SNES)
Joe & Mac 2: Lost in the Tropics (SNES)
Keio Flying Squadron
Keio Flying Squadron (MCD)
Keio Flying Squadron 2 (SAT)
King of Fighters*
King of Fighters R-1 (NGP)
King of Fighters R-2 (NGP)
The King of Fighters: The Orochi Saga (PSP) - KOF '94, KOF '95, KOF '96, KOF '97, KOF '98
King of the Monsters
King of the Monsters (SNES)
King of the Monsters 2 (SNES)
Kirby
Kirby's Adventure (NES)
Kirby Super Star (SNES)
Kirby's Dream Land 3 (SNES)
Kirby 64: The Crystal Shards (N64)
Kirby: Nightmare In Dreamland (GBA)
Kirby & the Amazing Mirror (GBA)
Kirby: Squeak Squad (NDS)
Kirby Super Star Ultra (NDS)
Klonoa*
Klonoa: Door To Phantomile (PSX)
Klonoa: Moonlight Museum (WS)
Klonoa: Empire of Dreams (GBA)
Klonoa 2: Dream Champ Tournament (GBA)
Klonoa Heroes: Densetsu no Star Medal (GBA)
Langrisser*
Warsong/Langrisser (GEN)
Der Langrisser (SFC)
Langrisser IV (PSX)
Legacy of Kain*
Blood Omen: Legacy of Kain (PSX)
Legacy of Kain: Soul Reaver (PSX)
LEGO*
LEGO Star Wars: The Video Game (GCN)
LEGO Star Wars II: The Original Trilogy (GCN)
Lemmings
Lemmings (SNES)
Lemmings 2: The Tribes (SNES)
3D Lemmings (PSX)
The Adventures of Lomax (PSX)
Lost Vikings
The Lost Vikings (SNES)
The Lost Vikings 2 (SNES)
Lunar
Lunar: Silver Star Story Complete (PSX)
Lunar 2: Eternal Blue Complete (PSX)
Mana
Secret of Mana (SNES)
Trials of Mana (SFC)
Legend of Mana (PSX)
Sword of Mana (GBA)
Children of Mana (DS)
Mario
Super Mario World (SNES)
Super Mario All-Stars (SNES)
Super Mario 64 (N64)
Luigi's Mansion (GCN)
Super Mario Sunshine (GCN)
Mario vs Donkey Kong (GBA)
Super Princess Peach (NDS)
Mario RPGs
Super Mario RPG: Legend of the Seven Stars (SNES)
Paper Mario (N64)
Paper Mario: The Thousand Year Door (GCN)
Mario & Luigi: Superstar Saga (GBA)
Mario & Luigi: Partners in Time (NDS)
Mario & Luigi: Bowser's Inside Story (NDS)
Mario Kart
Super Mario Kart (SNES)
Mario Kart 64 (N64)
Mario Kart: Super Circuit (GBA)
Mario Kart: Double Dash!! (GCN)
Mario Kart DS (NDS)
Mega Man
Mega Man (NES)
Mega Man 2 (NES)
Mega Man 3 (NES)
Mega Man 4 (NES)
Mega Man 5 (NES)
Mega Man 6 (NES)
Mega Man 7 (SNES)
Mega Man 8 (PSX)
Mega Man (Game Boy)
Mega Man: Dr Wily's Revenge (GB)
Mega Man II (GB)
Mega Man III (GB)
Mega Man IV (GB)
Mega Man V (GB)
Mega Man Legends
Mega Man Legends (PSX)
Mega Man Legends 2 (PSX)
Mega Man X*
Mega Man X (SNES)
Mega Man X2 (SNES)
Mega Man X3 (SNES)
Mega Man X4 (PSX)
Mega Man X5 (PSX)
Mega Man X6 (PSX)
Mega Man Zero
Mega Man Zero (GBA)
Mega Man Zero 2 (GBA)
Mega Man Zero 3 (GBA)
Mega Man Zero 4 (GBA)
Mega Man ZX
Mega Man ZX (NDS)
Mega Man ZX: Advent (NDS)
Mega Man Battle Network
Mega Man Battle Network (GBA)
Mega Man Battle Network 2 (GBA)
Mega Man Battle Network 3: Blue Version (GBA)
Mega Man Battle Network 4: Red Sun (GBA)
Rockman.EXE 4.5 Real Operation (GBA)
Mega Man Battle Network 5: Double Team (NDS)
Mega Man Battle Network 6: Cybeast Gregar (GBA)
RockMan EXE WS (WSC)
Mega Man Star Force
Mega Man Star Force: Dragon (NDS)
Mega Man Star Force 2: Zerker x Ninja (NDS)
Mega Man Star Force 3: Black Ace (NDS)
Megami Tensei*
Kyuuyaku Megami Tensei (SFC)
Shin Megami Tensei (SFC)
Shin Megami Tensei II (SFC)
Shin Megami Tensei: If... (SFC)
Shin Megami Tensei: Strange Journey (NDS)
Revelations: The Demon Slayer (GBC)
Megami Tensei Gaiden: Last Bible II (GBC)
Last Bible III (SFC)
Another Bible (GB)
Megami Tensei Gaiden: Last Bible Special (GG)
Majin Tensei (SFC)
Majin Tensei II: Spiral Nemesis (SFC)
Shin Megami Tensei: Persona (PSP)
Persona 2: Innocent Sin (PSX)
Persona 2: Eternal Punishment (PSX)
Shin Megami Tensei: Persona 3 Portable (PSP)
Shin Megami Tensei: Devil Survivor (NDS)
Shin Megami Tensei: Devil Survivor 2 (NDS)
Metal Gear*
Metal Gear Solid (PSX)
Metal Slug
Metal Slug: 1st Mission (NGP)
Metal Slug: 2nd Mission (NGP)
Metal Slug Advance (GBA)
Metal Slug Anthology (PSP) - Metal Slug, Metal Slug 2, Metal Slug X, Metal Slug 4, Metal Slug 5, Metal Slug 6
Metal Slug XX (PSP) + DLC
Metroid
Metroid II: Return of Samus (GB)
Super Metroid (SNES)
Metroid Fusion (GBA)
Metroid: Zero Mission (GBA)
Metroid Prime (GCN)
Metroid Prime 2 (GCN)
Metroid Prime: Hunters (NDS)
AM2R (PC)
Mortal Kombat*
Mortal Kombat Trilogy (PSX)
Myst
Myst (PSP)
Riven: The Sequel to Myst (PSX)
Need for Speed*
Road & Tracks Presents: The Need for Speed (PSX)
Need for Speed II (PSX)
Need for Speed III: Hot Pursuit (PSX)
Need for Speed: High Stakes (PSX)
Need for Speed: Porsche 2000 (PSX)
Need for Speed: Hot Pursuit 2 (GCN)
Need for Speed: Underground (GCN)
Need for Speed: Underground 2 (GCN)
Need for Speed: Most Wanted (GCN)
Need for Speed: Carbon (GCN)
Need for Speed Carbon: Own the City (PSP)
Need for Speed ProStreet (NDS)
Oasis/Story of Thor
Beyond Oasis (GEN)
Legend of Oasis (SAT)
Oddworld*
Oddworld: Abe's Oddysee (PSX)
Oddworld: Abe's Exoddus (PSX)
Pac-Man*
Pac-Man World (PSX)
Pac-Man World 2 (GCN)
Panzer Dragoon*
Panzer Dragoon (SAT)
Panzer Dragoon II Zwei (SAT)
Panzer Dragoon Saga (SAT)
Parasite Eve
Parasite Eve (PSX)
Parasite Eve II (PSX)
The 3rd Birthday (PSP)
Parodius
Parodius (SNES)
Gokujou Parodius (SFC)
Jikkyou Oshaberi Parodius (SFC)
Parodius Portable (PSP) - Parodius, Parodius Da!, Gokujou Parodius, Jikkyō Oshaberi Parodius, Sexy Parodius
Phantasy Star
Phantasy Star (SMS)
Phantasy Star II (GEN)
Phantasy Star III: Generations of Doom (GEN)
Phantasy Star IV: The End of the Millennium (GEN)
Phantasy Star 0 (NDS)
Phantasy Star Portable (PSP)
Phantasy Star Portable 2 (PSP)
Pikmin
Pikmin (GCN)
Pikmin 2 (GCN)
Pokemon
Pokemon: Crystal Version (GBC)
Pokemon: Emerald Version (GBA)
Pokemon: Platinum Version (NDS)
Pocky & Rocky
Pocky & Rocky (SNES)
Pocky & Rocky 2 (SNES)
Prince of Persia*
Prince of Persia (SNES)
Prince of Persia: The Sands of Time (GCN)
Prince of Persia: Warrior Within (GCN)
Prince of Persia: The Two Thrones (GCN)
Professor Layton
Professor Layton and the Curious Village (NDS)
Professor Layton and the Diabolical Box (NDS)
Professor Layton and the Unwound Future (NDS)
Professor Layton and the Last Specter (NDS)
Quake*
Quake 64 (N64)
Quake II (N64)
R-Type
Super R-Type (SNES)
R-Type III: The Third Lightning (SNES)
R-Types (PSX) - R-Type, R-Type II
R-Type Delta (PSX)
Rayman*
Rayman (PSX)
Resident Evil*
Resident Evil (PSX)
Resident Evil 2 (N64)
Resident Evil 3: Nemesis (PSX)
Resident Evil - Code: Veronica X (GCN)
Resident Evil 4 (GCN)
Resident Evil 0 (GCN)
Ridge Racer*
Ridge Racer (PSX)
Ridge Racer Revolution (PSX)
Rage Racer (PSX)
R4: Ridge Racer Type 4 (PSX)
Ridge Racer 64 (N64)
R: Racing Evolution (GCN)
Ridge Racer (PSP)
Ridge Racer 2 (PSP)
Rival Schools*
Rival Schools: United by Fate (PSX)
Rollcage
Rollcage (PSX)
Rollcage: Stage II (PSX)
Rolling Thunder
Rolling Thunder (NES)
Rolling Thunder 2 (GEN)
Rolling Thunder 3 (GEN)
SaGa*
Romancing SaGa (SFC)
Romancing SaGa 2 (SFC)
Romancing SaGa 3 (SFC)
SaGa Frontier (PSX)
SaGa Frontier 2 (PSX)
Samurai Shodown
Samurai Shodown Anthology (PSP) - Samurai Shodown, Samurai Shodown II, Samurai Shodown III, Samurai Shodown IV, Samurai Shodown V, Samurai Shodown VI
Scribblenauts
Scribblenauts (NDS)
Super Scribblenauts (NDS)
Shantae
Shantae (GBC)
Shantae: Risky's Revenge (iOS)
Shining Force
Shining Force (GEN)
Shining Force II (GEN)
Shining Force CD (MCD)
Shining the Holy Ark (SAT)
Shinobi*
Shinobi (SMS)
Shadow Dancer (SMS)
The Revenge of Shinobi (GEN)
Shadow Dancer: The Secret of Shinobi (GEN)
Shinobi III: Return of the Ninja Master (GEN)
Shinobi (GG)
Shinobi II: The Silent Fury (GG)
Shinobi X (SAT)
Solstice
Solstice: The Quest for the Staff of Demnos (NES)
Equinox (SNES)
Sonic*
Sonic CD (MCD)
Sonic the Hedgehog 3 & Knuckles (GEN)
Knuckles' Chaotix (32X)
Sonic the Hedgehog: Pocket Adventure (NGP)
Sonic Advance (GBA)
Sonic Advance 2 (GBA)
Sonic Advance 3 (GBA)
Sonic Heroes (GCN)
Shadow the Hedgehog (GCN)
Sonic Rush (NDS)
Sonic Rush Adventure (NDS)
Sonic Colours (NDS)
Sparkster
Rocket Knight Adventures (GEN)
Rocket Knight Adventures 2: Sparkster (GEN)
Sparkster (SNES)
Splatterhouse
Splatterhouse (TurboGrafx-16)
Splatterhouse 2 (GEN)
Splatterhouse 3 (GEN)
Spyro
Spyro the Dragon (PSX)
Spyro 2: Ripto's Rampage! (PSX)
Spyro: Year of the Dragon (PSX)
Squaresoft*
Alcahest (SFC)
Live a Live (SFC)
Secret of Evermore (SNES)
Bahamut Lagoon (SFC)
Treasure of the Rudras (SFC)
Einhänder (PSX)
Xenogears (PSX)
Brave Fencer Musashi (PSX)
Chocobo Racing (PSX)
Threads of Fate (PSX)
Vagrant Story (PSX)
Blood of Bahamut (NDS)
Starfy
Densetsu no Stafy (GBA)
Densetsu no Stafy 2 (GBA)
Densetsu no Stafy 3 (GBA)
Densetsu no Stafy 4 (GBA)
The Legendary Starfy (NDS)
Star Ocean*
Star Ocean (SFC)
Star Ocean: The Second Story (PSX)
Star Ocean: Blue Sphere (GBC)
StarTropics
StarTropics (NES)
Zoda's Revenge: StarTropics II (NES)
Star Wars*
Super Star Wars (SNES)
Super Star Wars: The Empire Strikes Back (SNES)
Super Star Wars: Return of the Jedi (SNES)
Street Fighter
Street Fighter II Turbo (SNES)
Street Fighter Alpha 3 (PSX)
Streets of Rage
Streets of Rage (GEN)
Streets of Rage 2 (GEN)
Streets of Rage 3 (GEN)
Strider
Strider (PSX)
Strider 2 (PSX)
Super Monkey Ball
Super Monkey Ball (GCN)
Super Monkey Ball 2 (GCN)
Super Monkey Ball Jr. (GBA)
Super Smash Bros.
Super Smash Bros. (N64)
Super Smash Bros. Melee (GCN)
Tales*
Tales of Phantasia (SFC)
Tales of Destiny (PSX)
Tales of Eternia (PSP)
Tales of Symphonia (GCN)
Tales of Innocence (NDS)
Tales of Hearts (NDS)
Tekken*
Tekken (PSX)
Tekken 2 (PSX)
Tekken 3 (PSX)
Tekken: Dark Resurrection (PSP)
Tekken 6 (PSP)
Tengai Makyō
Tengai Makyō Zero (SFC)
Oriental Blue: Ao no Tengai (GBA)
Thunder Force*
Thunder Force II (GEN)
Thunder Force III (GEN)
Thunder Force IV (GEN)
Thunder Spirits (SNES)
Thunder Force V (SAT)
Time Crisis*
Time Crisis (PSX)
Time Crisis: Project Titan (PSX)
Timesplitters*
Timesplitters 2 (GCN)
Timesplitters: Future Perfect (GCN)
Tomb Raider*
Tomb Raider (PSX)
Tomb Raider II: Starring Lara Croft (PSX)
Tomb Raider III: Adventures of Lara Croft (PSX)
Treasure
McDonald's Treasure Land Adventure (GEN)
Dynamite Headdy (GEN)
Alien Soldier (GEN)
Light Crusader (GEN)
Guardian Heroes (SAT)
Mischief Makers (N64)
Silhouette Mirage (PSX)
Radiant Silvergun (SAT)
Sin and Punishment (N64)
Ikaruga (GCN)
Turok
Turok: Dinosaur Hunter (N64)
Turok 2: Seeds of Evil (N64)
Turok 3: Shadow of Oblivion (N64)
Turok: Rage Wars (N64)
Turrican
Mega Turrican (GEN)
Super Turrican (NES)
Super Turrican (SNES)
Super Turrican 2 (SNES)
Twinbee
Pop'n TwinBee (SNES)
Pop'n TwinBee: Rainbow Bell Adventures (SNES)
Detana Twinbee Yahoo! Deluxe Pack (SAT)
Twisted Metal*
Twisted Metal (PSX)
Twisted Metal 2 (PSX)
Twisted Metal III (PSX)
Twisted Metal 4 (PSX)
Twisted Metal: Head On (PSP)
Ultraman
Ultraman: Towards the Future (SNES)
Valkyrie Profile*
Valkyrie Profile (PSX)
Valkyrie Profile: Lenneth (PSP)
Valkyrie Profile: Covenant of the Plume (NDS)
Vectorman
Vectorman (GEN)
Vectorman 2 (GEN)
Wild Arms
Wild Arms (PSX)
Wario
Wario Land: Super Mario Land 3 (GB)
Wario Land II (GBC)
Wario Land 3 (GBC)
Wario Land 4 (GBA)
Warioware Inc: Minigame Mania (GBA)
Wario World (GCN)
Wario: Master of Disguise (NDS)
Wars
Advance Wars (GBA)
Advance Wars 2: Black Hole Rising (GBA)
Advance Wars: Dual Strike (NDS)
World Heroes
World Heroes (SNES)
World Heroes 2 (SNES)
World Heroes 2 Jet (GB)
World Heroes Perfect (SAT)
X-COM*
X-COM: UFO Defense (PSX)
X-COM: Terror from the Deep (PSX)
Ys
Ys I & II Chronicles (PSP)
Ys IV: Mask of the Sun (SFC)
Ys IV: Dawn of Ys (TurboGrafx-CD)
Ys V: Kefin, Lost City of Sand (SFC)
Yoshi
Super Mario World 2: Yoshi's Island (SNES)
Yoshi's Island DS (NDS)
Zelda
The Legend of Zelda (NES)
Zelda II: The Adventure of Link (FDS)
The Legend of Zelda: A Link to the Past (SNES)
The Legend of Zelda: Link's Awakening DX (GBC)
The Legend of Zelda: Ocarina of Time (N64)
The Legend of Zelda: Majora's Mask (N64)
The Legend of Zelda: Oracle of Seasons & Oracle of Ages (GBC)
The Legend of Zelda: Four Swords Adventures (GCN)
The Legend of Zelda: The Minish Cap (GBA)
The Legend of Zelda: The Wind Waker (GCN)
The Legend of Zelda: Twilight Princess (GCN)
The Legend of Zelda: Phantom Hourglass (NDS)
The Legend of Zelda: Spirit Tracks (NDS)
One-offs
Cadash (TurboGrafx-16)
Cosmic Epsilon (NES)
Crystalis (NES)
Journey to Silius (NES)
Silver Surfer (NES)
Metal Storm (NES)
Vice: Project Doom (NES)
Mr. Gimmick (NES)
Kick Master (NES)
Little Samson (NES)
Summer Carnival '92: Recca (NES)
Phalanx (SNES)
HyperZone (SNES)
Axelay (SNES)
Run Saber (SNES)
Zombies Ate My Neighbours (SNES)
Ardy Lightfoot (SNES)
Wild Guns (SNES)
Energy Breaker (SFC)
Columns (GEN)
Super Fantasy Zone (GEN)
Ranger X (GEN)
Landstalker: The Treasures of King Nole (GEN)
Pulseman (GEN)
Panorama Cotton (GEN)
Ristar (GEN)
Comix Zone (GEN)
Toy Story (GEN)
Sol-Feace (MCD)
Android Assault: The Revenge of Bari-Arm (MCD)
Popful Mail (MCD)
SoulStar (MCD)
Flink (MCD)
Tempo (32X)
Kolibri (32X)
Astal (SAT)
DoDonPachi (SAT)
Steam Hearts (SAT)
Wave Race 64 (N64)
Mace: The Dark Age (N64)
Dark Rift (N64)
Tetrisphere (N64)
GoldenEye 007 (N64)
1080° Snowboarding (N64)
Iggy's Reckin' Balls (N64)
Space Station Silicon Valley (N64)
Glover (N64)
Jet Force Gemini (N64)
Rocket: Robot on Wheels (N64)
Perfect Dark (N64)
In the Hunt (PSX)
Rapid Reload (PSX)
Vandal Hearts (PSX)
Disruptor (PSX)
NanoTek Warrior (PSX)
Panzer Bandit (PSX)
Shadow Master (PSX)
Skullmonkeys (PSX)
Heart of Darkness (PSX)
Future Cop LAPD (PSX)
The Adventure of Little Ralph (PSX)
LSD: Dream Emulator (PSX)
Vib-Ribbon (PSX)
Cave Story (PSX)
Doshin the Giant (GCN)
Meteos (NDS)
Scurge: Hive (NDS)
Elite Beat Agents (NDS)
Ghost Trick: Phantom Detective (NDS)
Currently playing
Sonic Advance 2 (GBA)
Kirby 64: The Crystal Shards (N64)
Live a Live (SFC)
Mario & Luigi: Superstar Saga (GBA)
Ecco the Dolphin (Genesis)
Final Fantasy I & II: Dawn of Souls (GBA, FF2 only)
Super Aleste (SNES)
Bomberman 64 (N64)
Bomberman Max: Blue Champion/Red Challenger (GBC)
Mega Man X5 (PSX)
Pop'n Twinbee (SNES)
Pikmin (GCN)
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gmlocg · 7 months
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561.) Mega Bomberman (Bomberman '94)
Release: December 10th, 1993 | GGF: Action, Arcade, Maze | Developer(s): Hudson Soft Company, Ltd. | Publisher(s): Hudson Soft Company, Ltd., SEGA Corporation, Tec Toy Indústria de Brinquedos S.A., Hudson Entertainment, Inc., Konami Digital Entertainment Co., Ltd. | Platform(s): TurboGrafx-16 (1993), Genesis (1994), Wii (2006), PlayStation 3 (2011), PSP (2011), PS Vita (2012), Wii U (2014), Windows Apps (2014)
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jacksonpiner · 2 years
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Bomberman fantasy race poop
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Bomberman fantasy race poop full#
Bomberman fantasy race poop pro#
Bomberman fantasy race poop ps3#
Bomberman fantasy race poop pro#
Coinbase Pro CoinSpot Crex24 Deribit DFX.swiss FTX Gate.io Gemini HitBTC Huobi Indep.bella truelove harvey tanner runescape1 fantasy peter casanova. It sure isn't like your typical racer - Bomberman Fantasy Race has players riding on big loping kangaroos and giant blue rabbitty-dinos as they hop and dash to the finish line with long, bounding gaits. Pokmon, T, English, Fantasy & Humor, chapters: 39, words: 5k+, favs: 3, follows: 3, updated: Aug 19 published: Jul 15, 2021, Cynthia/Shirona. samantha1 heather 7654321 elizabeth1 poop tigger1 family1 mustang1 142536. Riding atop rabbit- and kangaroo-like steeds, Bomberman and friends (including the likes of Black Bomberman, Pretty Bomber, Mach Bomber and Mechbomber) scamper around seven different courses with the. The man with the big bombs is blowing up a completely different type of game in this strange and whimsical racing game. Bibox Binance Binance US Bitfinex Bithumb BitMEX Bitpanda Bitpanda Pro Bitstamp Bittrex Bitso Bitvavo Bleutrade BTC Markets Bybit Celsius CEX Coinbase Best known for his explosive platforming antics, Bomberman expands his repertoire with a mascot-based racing game entitled Bomberman Fantasy Race.BOMB3 -> Bomberman, BOMB4 -> fBomb, BOMB5 -> Bombcrypto Coin. Where can you ride a kangaroo or a rhino to victory In. ATOMIC2 -> Atomic Floki, ATOZ -> Race Kingdom, ATP -> Atlas Protocol, ATP2 -> Alaya.
Bomberman fantasy race poop ps3#
KuCoin KuCoin Futures Localbitcoins Luxor Mercatox MEXC Nexo NFTBank Northcrypto OKCoin Okex Phemex Pocket Bitcoin Poloniex Relai STEX SwissBorg Swyftx Tradeogre Uphold Voyager Yield App Zerion From the days of the PS one, this downloadable game allows you to play the classic original on your PSP handheld system or PS3 home console.
Changelly Circle Coinbase Coinbase Pro CoinEx Coinmate Coinmerce Coinmetro Coss Crex24 Criptan Deribit DFX.swiss Digital Surge Gate.io Gemini HitBTC Hodlnaut Hotbit Iconomi Idex Kraken Kraken Futures.
Bitpanda Bitpanda Pro Bitrue Bitstamp Bittrex BitYard BlockFi BSDEX BTC Markets BTCPay Bybit Cake Defi Celsius CEX
Abra Acx AscendEX Binance Binance US Bison Bitcoin Suisse Bitfinex Bithumb Glo.
CHECKS: Missing Transactions Duplicate Transactions Validate Transactions Transaction Flow Report EASY TRACKING: Easy Enter Statistics If you like cute racing games and want a good time for one or two players, Bomberman Fantasy Race will probably suit you.
Bomberman fantasy race poop full#
theyre like Zelda if Zelda was full of horrifying hellspawn, poop.
GAINS (Expert): Realized & Unrealized Gains Tax-privileged Coins (Short & Long) Roll Forward / Audit Report Trade Analysis Average Purchase Prices Maybe you played through Final Fantasy X and X-2 back in the day and want to.
BALANCE: Current Balance Daily Balance Balance by Exchange Balance by Currency Coins by Exchange.
TRADES: Trade Statistics Trade List Trade Prices Trading Fees Number of Trades Double-Entry List Like Final Fantasy VIII, X5s taken a lot of flak over the years for doing things.
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cutestknife · 7 years
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Fav game from childhood
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g4zdtechtv · 5 years
Video
youtube
FULL EPISODE: X-Play - A Distance Education Course in the Practice and Theory of Square Dancing
Get practical advice on dating your cousins AND chewing wacky tobaccy!
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thatottergamer · 3 years
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Great finds at the local pawn shop.
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surgeon-o-death · 6 years
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It’s September! Time for an update
Our blogs are @GameArtArchive , @OldGameMags,  @Sonic_Hedgeblog, @nintendometro & @Sega_City, and you should follow them all! We also have a Discord server, which you can join here:  discord.gg/qYzH3E6
For Game Art Archive I work hard to extract the art at the best quality, and bringing all sorts of weird, rare artwork to the limelight.
This month we’ve got some great games - including:
Pocket Bomberman (Game Boy)
Code Name Viper (NES)
Puyo Puyo Fever (Dreamcast / GC / PSP)
Panzer Dragoon (Saturn)
Sonic The Fighters (Arcade)
Over on Old Game Mags, we rummage through all the great 80’s and 90’s magazines to find fascinating articles, cover artwork and advertisements for the games of yesteryear, posting several times a day!
We’ll be going through:
Gamefan Vol 4 #12, Dec 96
Hyper Magazine #7, May 94
Beep! Megadrive #52, January 1994
Sega Saturn Magazine JP #4, April 1995
Sega Megazone #56, Dec 95
Sonic The Hedgeblog has post posts about long lost artwork, GIFs, secrets and more from the blue rodent.
Sega City and Nintendo Metro are a mixture of them all - reblogging magazine ads and artwork from either platforms, with a mixture of new GIFs, videos or secrets thrown in for good measure.
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All blogs are maintained by me - Ryan Langley, aka Rlan . It’s a lot of work maintaining, extracting and posting everything. If you like what I’m doing, you can support us on Patreon , where you can get updates on both blogs, as well as the original high resolution extracted art from VGAA! Every dollar helps!
Join the Patreon and Help me do even more!
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satoshi-mochida · 5 years
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Some games on the ‘Big in Japan’ sale going on now on the NA PSN(full list/prices; sale is also active in other regions, not sure if the list will be the same):
PS4
2064: Read Only Memories(also on Vita)
428: Shibuya Scramble
Aegis of Earth(also on Vita)
Arslan: The Warriors of Legend
Birthdays the Beginning
BlazBlue: Central Fiction
Blue Reflection
Castlevania Anniversary Collection
Chocobo’s Mystery Dungeon: Every Buddy
Cladun Returns! This is Sengoku
Code: Realize: Bouquet of Rainbows
Code: Realize: Wintertide Miracles
Dark Souls Remastered
Dark Souls II: Scholar of the First Sin
Dark Souls III
Death Mark(also on Vita)
Devil May Cry 4 Special Edition
Devil May Cry 5
Devil May Cry HD Collection
Dissidia Final Fantasy NT
Dragon Ball FighterZ
Dragon Ball Xenoverse
Dragon Ball Xenoverse 2
Dragon Quest Builders(also on Vita)
Dragon Quest Builders 2
Dragon Quest Heroes
 Earth Defense Force 4.1
Exist Archive(also on Vita)
Fairy Fencer F: Advent Dark Force
Fate Extella(also on Vita)
Final Fantasy IX
Final Fantasy X/X-2(also on PS3/Vita)
Final Fantasy Type-0 HD
Final Fantasy XV
God Eater 2: Rage Burst
God Eater 3
Guilty Gear Xrd Revelator
Guilty Gear Xrd Rev 2
Gundam Versus
Hatsune Miku: Project Diva X(also on Vita)
I Am Setsuna
Judgment
Jump Force
Kingdom Hearts All-in-One Package
Kingdom Hearts 1.5+2.5 Remix
Kingdom Hearts 2.8: Final Chapter Prologue
Kingdom Hearts III
Life is Strange 2: Episode 1
Light Tracer
Little Dragons Cafe
Lost Sphear
Mega Man 30th Anniversary Bundle
Mega Man Legacy Collection 1+2(also on sale separately)
Mega Man X Legacy Collection 1+2(also on sale separately)
Megadimension Neptunia VII
Megadimension Neptunia VIIR
Mega Man 11
My Hero(Academia): One’s Justice
Naruto Shippuden: Ultimate Ninja Storm 4: Road to Boruto(and several other games in the series)
Ni no Kuni 2
Nobunaga’s Ambition: Taishi
Odin Sphere: Leifthrasir(also on PS3/Vita)
Omega Quintet
One Piece: Burning Blood
One Piece: World Seeker
One Piece: Pirate Warriors 3
Override: Mech City Brawl
Persona 5(also on PS3)
Psycho-Pass: Mandatory Happiness(also on Vita)
Resident Evil 2(and several others in the series)
Romance of the Three Kingdoms 13
Romancing SaGa 2
Saint Seiya Soldiers’ Soul
Secret of Mana(also on Vita)
Sekiro
Shadow of the Tomb Raider
Shenmue I+II
Shining Resonance Refrain
Soulcalibur VI
Star Ocean: Integrity and Faithlessness
Star Ocean: The Last Hope
Star Ocean: Till the End of Time
Steins;Gate Elite
Super Bomberman R
Super Neptunia RPG
Tales of Berseria
Tales of Vesperia: Definitive Edition
The 25th Ward: The Silver Case
The Girl and the Robot
The Last Remnant Remastered
The Liar Princess and the Blind Prince
The Quiet Man
The Silver Case
Tokyo Twilight Ghost Hunters Daybreak: Special Gigs(also on Vita)
Tokyo Xanadu eX+
Touhou Genso Rondo
Under Night In-Birth Exe:Late[st](also on PS3/Vita)
Valkyria Chronicles 4
Wonder Boy: The Dragon’s Trap
World of Final Fantasy(also on Vita)
Yakuza 6
Yakuza Kiwami
Yakuza Kiwami 2
Ys Origins(also on Vita)
Zanki Zero: Last Beginning
Zero Escape: Zero Time Dilemma (also on Vita)
Zero Escape: The Nonary Games (also on Vita)
Zone of the Enders: The Second Runner- M∀RS
PS3
Demon’s Souls
Dengeki Bunko: Fighting Climax(also on Vita)
Drakengard 3
Final Fantasy Origins(PSOne Classic)
Final Fantasy V (PSOne Classic)
Final Fantasy VI (PSOne Classic)
Final Fantasy VII (PSOne Classic)
Final Fantasy VIII (PSOne Classic)
Final Fantasy IX(PSOne Classic)
Final Fantasy XIII-2
Final Fantasy Tactics(PSOne Classic)
Lightning Returns: Final Fantasy XIII
Hatsune Miku: Project Diva F 2nd(also on Vita)
Lost Dimension(also on Vita)
Mamorukun Curse
Mega Man 8 (PSOne Classic)
Mega Man 9+10(also on sale separately)
Mega Man Legends (PSOne Classic)
Mega Man Legends 2 (PSOne Classic)
Mega Man X4  (PSOne Classic)
Mega Man X5  (PSOne Classic)
Metal Gear Rising: Revengance
Metal Gear Solid HD Collection
Nights into Dreams
Persona 4 Arena
Persona 4 Arena Ultimax
Resident Evil(and several others in the series)
Resonance of Fate
Silent Hill (PSOne Classic)
Suikoden  (PSOne Classic)
Suikoden II (PS2 Classic)
Suikoden 3  (PS2 Classic)
Suikoden IV (PSOne Classic)
Tears to Tiara II
The Awakend Fate Ultimatum
The Guided Fate Paradox
Vita
7′scarlet
Adventures of Mana
Bad Apple Wars
Code: Realize
Code: Realize: Future Blessings
Collar x Malice
Dissidia Final Fantasy(PSP game)
Dissidia 012 Final Fantasy(PSP)
Dungeon Travelers 2
Earth Defense Force 2
Final Fantasy III (PSP)
Final Fantasy IV Complete Collection (PSP)
Final Fantasy Tactics: The War of the Lions (PSP)
Hakuoki: Edo Blossoms
Hakuoki: Kyoto Winds
Hatsune Miku: Project Diva X
Hyperdimension Neptunia Re;Birth 1
Hyperdimension Neptunia Re;Birth 2
Hyperdimension Neptunia Re;Birth 3
Jet Set Radio
Mary Skelter: Nightmares
Mega Man: Maverick Hunter X (PSP)
Megatagmension Blanc + Neptune Vs Zombies
MeiQ: Labyrinth of Death
Mind Zero
Muramasa Rebirth
Norn9
Operation Abyss: New Tokyo Legacy
Operation Babel: New Tokyo Legacy
Penny-Punching Princess
Period Cube
Persona 4 Golden
Persona 4: Dancing All Night
Psychedelica of the Black Butterfly
Psychedelica of the Ashen Hawk
Shiren the Wanderer: The Tower of Fortune and the Dice of Fate
Sorcery Saga: Curse of the Great Curry God
Stranger of Sword City
Tactics Ogre: Let Us Cling Together
The Longest Five Minutes
The Lost Child
Tokyo Xanadu
Utawarerumono: Mask of Deception and Truth Bundle(also on sale separately)
Valkyria Revolution
Ends September 24th.
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