Koma, or Beigoma, are a kind of traditional Japanese wooden spinning top. In this game, you play as one in the odd situation of having to collect exclamation marks while trying to stay to moving platforms above an endless black void. Each stage has a different set of platforms, and though they move in the same patterns every time, the exclamation marks appear in random positions.
An action game taking place on floating isometric islands, and on each stage, the player must find and kill all the enemies therein. The game is notable for its unusual and visceral depiction of Christian religious figures.
The sequel to Sprite Road is radically different than its predecessor. Instead of a puzzle platforming game, it's a short overhead action-RPG reminiscent of Legend of Zelda games.
After World War III, humans have finally achieved world peace - or so they thought. Malevolent aliens have infected the human organism in a most treacherous way possible, turning young and pretty women into rampaging, violent nymphomaniacs. Only one person can stop the insanity - the attractive secret agent with the codename Lyewärd. Guerrière Lyewärd is a side-scrolling beat-em-up. The gameplay is very simple: the player moves the protagonist through strictly linear stages from left to right, each containing a few types of female enemies that attack the heroine from both sides. The secret agent can punch, kick, and jump. Power-ups such as health-restoring hearts and invincibility appear at set points during the stages, floating in the air. Each stage culminates with a boss battle against a powerful female enemy; defeating the boss leads to a lesbian sex scene.
This port of Lemmings is almost completely identical to the original Amiga release. The only difference is the rerecorded soundtrack and SFX for use on the Sharp's different soundcard. Unlike other Japanese releases, the soundtrack is the same score from the original Amiga release.