In December 2000, Konami released Dance Dance Revolution KIDS, which had a new cabinet and game specifically made for a younger audience. The game was never released outside of Japan. Today, very few of these cabinets are left.
Shoot clouds in the sky. Avoid rain drops and other enemies. Try to destroy all clouds before your chamber is flooded.
Cloud 9 was produced by Atari in 1983.
Atari released 137 machines in our database under this trade name, starting in 1972. Atari was based in United States.
Other machines made by Atari during the time period Cloud 9 was produced include: Fast Freddie, Gravitar, Dig Dug, Black Widow, Akka Arrh, Alpha 1, Arabian, Cloak & Dagger, Crystal Castles, and Firebeast aka Dragon Master
A one- or two-player baseball game. The umpire sounds really Japanese.
Champion Baseball 2 was produced by Sega in 1983.
Sega released 593 machines in our database under this trade name, starting in 1960. Sega was based in United States.
Other machines made by Sega during the time period Champion Baseball 2 was produced include: Character Cabinets, Oh Shou Serizawa 8dan no Tsume-Shougi, Zoom 909, Zektor, Tac/Scan, Astron Belt, Champion Baseball, Champion Boxing, Commando (Sega), and Congo Bongo
Oishii Puzzle Wa Irimasen Ka is a puzzle video game, developed by Kuusoukagaku Corp. and published by Sunsoft on September 1993 in Japan only for arcades.
There are four mini-games to choose from: crossword puzzles, picture matching (jigsaw puzzles), spot the differences, and hide and seek. The game progresses in a sugoroku format, where you spin the roulette wheel, move forward by the number of squares that come up, and play the mini-games instructed on the squares that stop. It is developed by the Science Fiction Research Institute.
In 1994, it was ported to the Super Famicom as Hebereke No Oishii Puzzle Ha Irimasen Ka which featured the company's mascot character, Hebereke.
Super World Stadium '99 (スーパーワールドスタジアム'99, literally: Sūpā Wārudo Sutajiamu '99), is a baseball arcade game that was released by Namco in 1999 only in Japan; it runs on Namco System 12 hardware and is the twelfth entry in the company's long-running World Stadium series. It is also the fifth entry in the series that does not use a Yamaha YM-2151 FM sound chip for music (as with its four immediate predecessors, it uses a C352 custom sound chip for everything) and the second title in the series which features three-dimensional polygonal graphics (as well as non-identical-looking players).