Side-scrolling soccer game and the third in the Kick Off series. Kick Off 3 was the first game in the series to be developed by someone other than Dino Dini.
Five great PGA European Tour courses to play on with 90 new challenging holes. Featuring 60 PGA European Tour pros, five different gameplay formats, new changing weather conditions, and new Match Play!
Now those crazy Tiny Toon Adventures characters are creating sporting havoc! Create teams from amongst your favorite toons - each with their own individual techniques - for the wackiest games of soccer and basketball you've ever seen!
Realistic gameplay with over 15 different moves. Customize gameplay to suit your own soccer style using pre-match options. Over 3000 frames of animation.
After the first game proved to be a worldwide success, EA developed this sequel exclusively for Sega's 16-bit console. The biggest change from FIFA International Soccer are obviously the dozens of club teams from England, France, Germany, Italy, The Netherlands, United States, Spain and Brazil, taking the team number tally to over 200. This also increased the number of competitions, with each country having it's own League, Tournament and Playoff. Also new, a battery backup allowed to save up to four competitions in the cartridge, replacing passwords. For those who want to settle things the fast way, a Penalty Shootout training mode was added.
Play singles and doubles exhibition games, knockout tournaments or go on a world tour, it's all here in this tennis sim. You can choose to play as the (then) world seed 1, Pete Sampras himself or choose from 29 other players.
The action is viewed from the traditional third-person viewpoint. A tutorial mode is provided to help you get used to the forehand, lob and drop shots on offer. Several venues from all over the world can be played on, on Hard, Grass and Clay courts.
This was the first and one of the very few Genesis games to be released with a J-Cart, which meant that four-way gameplay was possible without the need of special adapters – the cartridge had two built-in joypad connectors. The Game Gear version was equally inventive, allowing two players to share one Game Gear, or four players to play doubles by linking two machines.
A hockey game released in Sweden in late 1994. The gameplay is based on the NHL games but it's starring the teams and players from the swedish hockey league Elitserien.
It features 32 college powerhouses from four major divisions, letting you play exhibition games or letting you compete in a tournament to achieve an #1 ranking, as opposed to competing in a season to obtain it. It also has the option to play it on Team Player letting you control four players at once.
NCAA Final Four Basketball is a standard basketball-sim with a full NCAA license with 64 of the top Division 1-A teams including North Carolina, Florida State, Boston College, and Maryland to name a few.
There are three modes of play to choose from: two Practice modes, one which shows the player the basic in's and outs of the game and another for free throw shooting, Exhibition and Tournament. Along with these modes are the ability to change around options to play a game to the player's liking including changing the length of the game. A battery-backup lets the player save their games, stats and rosters.
Kick Off 3: European Challenge is a football game developed by Steve Screech for Anco Games as a sequel to Kick Off 2 (which made it to the Sega Mega Drive in the altered form of Super Kick Off). VIC Tokai published a version for the Mega Drive in 1994.
Unlike its predecessors, Kick Off 3 had no involvement from lead programmer Dino Dini, and thus plays very differently to other games in the series, having a "horizontal" pitch as opposed to a "vertical" one. Due to these radical changes, the game was met with controversy upon release. Dino Dini released his own football game around the same time for the Amiga titled Goal!, which made its way onto the Mega Drive as Dino Dini's Soccer.
Battle Soccer 2 is a football video game, developed by Pandora Box and published by Banpresto, which was released exclusively in Japan in 1994.
This game is a sequel to Battle Soccer: Field no Hasha, and includes SD to Deformed appearances from the Ultraman series , Kamen Rider series , and Gundam series are teamed up to compete in soccer.
Side-series edition of Jikkyou Pawafuru Puroyakyu based on Jikkyou Pawafuru Puroyakyu '94. The roster is updated to reflect the contemporaneous NPB Season. The Mini Pennant mode from '94 has been expanded as well, allowing for a full season to be played as opposed to the prior 15 game limit.
Ultra Baseball Jitsumei-ban 2 is the fifth game in the Ultra Baseball (Baseball Simulator in the USA) series. It was released in 1994 for the Super Nintendo by Culture Brain in Japan only.
These Baseball titles included some form of "Super League" where pitchers and batters would have special abilities.
Baseball Simulator 1.000 (1989, NES), also known as Choujin Ultra Baseball
Super Baseball Simulator 1.000 (1991, Super NES), also known as Super Ultra Baseball
Ultra Baseball Jitsumei Ban (1992, SNES) NPB licensed.
Super Ultra Baseball 2 (1994, SNES)
Ultra Baseball Jitsumei Ban 2 (1994, SNES) NPB licensed.
Ultra Baseball Jitsumei Ban 3 (1995, SNES) NPB licensed.