This game let's you revisit Disney's The Lion King in an interactive storybook format with a selection of scenes from the movie. Each scene has narrated text and the characters and landscapes can be interacted with to trigger short animations. It also features three minigames: Simba stalking Zazu, drawing picures in the stars, catching bugs for Timon.
Board game adaptation of the long-running monster-raising video and table-top game franchise that plays similarly to Dokapon Kingdom. It was created by Sofel in 1994.
The sequel to GP-1, the player once again can race with motorcycles on 17 different tracks located across 14 different countries. The player also has six different bikes to choose from. Players can also upgrade their bikes by winning races and earn points, earning enough points will let the player obtain better parts for their bike.
The season mode, otherwise known as the Grand Prix is present along with a Practice and Race mode, but there is also a Battle mode that allows two friends to duke it out head-to-head on the track of their choice. A password feature is also present to allow players to pick up and play at their leisure.
This title is about monsters that are attacking the World of Nakayoshi. The monsters are eating up the citizens. The more they eat, the hungrier they get. Four girls must stop the monsters and defeat Daima to save the World of Nakayoshi. The game is an overhead Adventures of Lolo-style puzzle game featuring characters from various Nakayoshi-printed manga. Sailor Moon and Chibi Moon are playable characters. There are also characters from Goldfish Warning!.
Hana no Keiji: Kumo no Kanata ni is a weapon-based versus fighting game based on the manga of the same title (created by Tetsuo Hara).
There are two playable modes, in one you can follow the manga story, while in other you can fight against the computer or player two. There are eight different characters and scenarios to choose from. When following the manga story, there are different paths depending on the choice that the player makes.
The most significant thing about the versus battle is that the characters can lose their weapons as much as recover them. Also, a special trick can be executed when the player has enough energy.
Dream Basketball: Dunk & Hoop is a basketball game from Human Entertainment that was released exclusively in Japan for the Super Famicom in late 1994. The player can choose between a regular match of basketball, featuring two baskets and teams of five, or a 3-on-3 mode which is focused on one basket. Up to five human players can join in on either mode, provided a multi-tap peripheral is available.
The game features sixteen fictional basketball teams as well as one all-star team that is only available in the Exhibition mode. They include: The Photons, the Comets, the Flames, the Vikings, the Arrows, the Tomahawks, the Rollers, the Stingrays, the Langers (possibly meant to be Rangers), the Rings, the Waves, the Wizards, the Unicorns, the Tridents, the Sprinters, the Serpents. The all-star team is simply called Japan.
Tsuyoshi Shikkari Shinasai: Taisen Puzzle-dama is a Taisen Puzzle-Dama video game based on the manga Tsuyoshi Shikkari Shinasai.
It features the cast of the manga and anime Tsuyoshi Shikkari Shinasai and Konami's own spin on Puyo Puyo: Taisen Puzzle-Dama. The goal of the game is to compete with a series of characters from Tsuyoshi Shikkari Shinasai depending on who the player selected.
A Super Famicom mahjong game featuring the artwork of the manga artist Yuujin (U-Jin). It is the sequel to the 1993 game Yuujin: Janjyu Gakuen.
Yuujin: Janjyu Gakuen 2 (lit. "U-Jin: Sparrow Beast School 2") is a 1994 mahjong game and a continuation of Yuujin: Janjyu Gakuen. The player once again takes to the streets to help out their fellow students at the eponymous school, usually via mahjong matches. The game features the artwork of the mononymed manga artist Yuujin (U-Jin). While U-Jin is best known for his eroge (adult manga) works, the game does not depict any pornographic imagery due to Nintendo's strict content rules.
The game was not localized into English nor released outside of Japan.
Boogerman: A Pick and Flick Adventure is a 2D platform video game created by Interplay Entertainment and released for the Sega Mega Drive/Genesis in 1994 and later on the Super Nintendo Entertainment System (SNES) in 1995. The Genesis version was also released on the Wii Virtual Console in North America on November 24, 2008 and in Europe on December 12, 2008. The game's lead character also made a cameo appearance as a playable character and the rival of Earthworm Jim in Interplay's ClayFighter 63⅓.
A revolution in combat games - featuring a unique combat intelligence system that adapts to and learns your style of play! The first game with film-quality, controllable 3D graphics. Robot attack routines choreographed by a martial arts expert. Witness the first ever morphing character to appear in a computer game! Awesome cinematic link sequences.
Donkey Kong Country is a side scrolling platformer by British developers Rare in 1994. It featured revolutionary pre-rendered 3D graphics that give the game a very unique look compared to most other games on consoles at the time. The two playable characters featured in the game are the titular character, Donkey Kong and his nephew, Diddy Kong. Together the two swing, climb, jump, swim, cartwheel, ride animals, and blast out of barrels on their way to recover their stolen bannanas from the evil King K. Rool and his Kremling army. The adventure takes you through a variety of different environments and levels that continually change up gameplay. Donkey Kong Country also provides plenty of opportunities for exploration with almost every level having a multitude of collectible, shortcuts, and hidden bonus areas.
Ready for some Football! Sega Sports kicks off the season with reckless abandon and all the sticks of the Real NFL. The stars are here: Montana, Young, Elway, E. Smith, Rice, Sanders, White...in the most realistic Sega Genesis Football game of all time.
A Year at Pooh Corner is a Sega Pico game based on the Winnie the Pooh franchise. In Japan it is known as Pooh-san to Tanoshii Nakama-tachi.
This is likely the most common game for the system, having been bundled with Pico console from launch in non-Japanese territories.
Released on PC in 1994. Developed by Chris Sawyer, and coded in X86 Assembly language, it was among the first in the relatively new 'tycoon' genre of games - simulations of business empires that the player founded, grew and took full control of.
Transport Tycoon saw the player running their transport empire from 1930 to 2030, with rail, road, sea and air transport available to help the player's expansion of their business. New technologies are introduced to the player at historically accurate times, and players could see first-hand how advancements changed the way their businesses were run.
Released in 1994 for both the Super NES and the Sega Genesis, Wolverine: Adamantium Rage is a platform-action video game. Teeny Weeny Games developed the Genesis version, while the Super NES version was created by Bits Studios. Despite being developed independently, the two versions share a common opening storyline and gameplay, though they differ in certain key aspects. Notably, it is one of the pioneering video games to incorporate a recharging health system.
JumpStart Kindergarten is a grade-based original classic JumpStart game developed by Fanfare Software and released by Knowledge Adventure in 1994. JumpStart Kindergarten was the first installment in the JumpStart series, as well as Knowledge Adventure's first curriculum-based product.
It was also re-released by Davidson & Associates in 1998 under the name Davidson's Learning Center Series: Kindergarten.
It was later replaced by an updated version of JumpStart Kindergarten in 1997.