A journalist from the Fame magazine, along with a photographer, is sent on the maiden voyage of the luxury cruise ship Atlantia. The assignment is to get an interview from the sheikh of Harrout -- the owner of the ship.
Aboard, several sudden explosions rock the ship, and a voice from the announcement system tells: We are sinking! Get to the lifeboats immediately
Long time ago, seven gods who were guarding the Earth defeated the evil god Gadim. But time has passed, and the seven benevolent gods have vanished one by one. Evil has awaken from its slumber. It's time for somebody else - a human - to become a hero and to defeat it once and for all. This chosen one is a young girl named Thiria Fray. She must find other girls with supernatural powers to aid her on her quest to defeat the evil.
Filsnown plays like a standard top-down Japanese RPG: the party of heroines roams the world map, descend into dungeons, fight random enemies in first-person perspective combat using regular attacks or magic, and visit towns and villages to buy supplies and to rest. It contains cut-scenes with nudity and explicit sexual situations.
DR² Night Janki is a mahjong game with adult scenes. The game has two modes: "Story" and "Regular". The story mode is set in a medieval castle, which is said to be ancient grounds for sorcery, but is currently controlled by the mysterious Rumira, who runs a mahjong club. The hero, a man named Ryuuji, decides to investigate the castle, and therefore has to defeat its inhabitants in mahjong matches.
Starfire is an action RPG for PC-9800, initially designed by Winston Douglas Wood (of Phantasie fame) and developed by StarCraft Inc. as a successor to Star Command. The game underwent major changes during the development and eventually became a more straightforward dungeon/space shooter RPG running on the Might & Magic 3 engine.
In this game, you are a member of a mercenary squad of infantry mechs contracted by the government to do dirty jobs. Eventually you gain access to a space ship and travel the galaxy to deal with an alien invasion.
This title was developed by Ken Takahashi and co-produced by Miya Ayako. The game is based in Konami's Loco-Motion, and the player has to collect the carrots and go through the outer tracks to clear the stages.
Players must grab their weapons and descend into several labyrinthine floors, full of monsters and hazards, in this 2D FPS. Each level has a mix of baddies and collectibles, plus damaging tiles and/or conveyor belts to complicate movement. You start on a safe floor with other NPCs roaming around; later stages delve into horror, cyberpunk, and fleshy aesthetics. Maze 999 uses the developer's own raycasting engine, rendering the world a la Wolfenstein 3D.