ActRaiser 2, is a side-scrolling platform game for the Super Nintendo Entertainment System video game console developed by Quintet and published by Enix (now Square Enix) in 1993 and is the sequel to the popular game ActRaiser. The game tells a story that parallels the famous religious epics Paradise Lost and Divine Comedy.
The NES version varied greatly from the others as well as the game show itself in that the events were morphed into side-scrolling and overhead mini-levels that only partially resembled the real-life events.
Each joust event involved four different gladiator battles atop platforms which needed to be won, with a series of joust platforms to be jumped across in between battles.
Human Cannonball also required four gladiators to be beaten with perfectly-timed leaps off the rope while the gladiator\'s platform elevated up and down, making the task that much more difficult. In this event and the Joust, Gladiators screamed gratuitously (and often humorously) as they were knocked off the platforms.
3D Ballz is a two player 3D action fighting game for the Sega Mega Drive/Genesis, the Super NES (SNES) and the 3DO. It was developed by PF Magic and published by Accolade in 1994. The 3DO version was released as a director\'s cut in 1995. Ballz offered three difficulty levels over a total of 21 matches. Its distinguishing quality was that each of the characters were composed completely of balls, with a pseudo-3D look.
Battle Cars is a video game for the Super NES published by Namco in 1993 . It is a futuristic racing game in which cars are equipped with missiles, grenade launchers, and sliding disks which are used to eliminate opponents.
The game can be played by either 1 or 2 players. In a 1-player game, the player progresses through a series of progressively harder levels. Two players can alternate as each progresses through the levels of the 1-player game, or they may go head-to-head in a number of race tracks.
Bill Walsh College Football is a Super NES, Sega Mega Drive/Genesis, and Sega Mega-CD American football game; one of the earliest videogames to deal with the sport at a college level.
The game features 25 college teams from the 1992 season and 25 historical teams. Pitt \'80, Auburn \'83, Florida \'84, Brigham Young University Provo\' 84, Texas \'81, and Notre Dame \'88 were prominent historical teams featured in the game.
It is one of the only College Football games to feature a choice between Bowl games or Playoffs
The game focuses around protagonist Kyle Vlaros who is known as the Blackthorne, out for revenge on Sarlac and his minions. The gameplay involves large platforming sequences, in which Kyle can run and climb around the environment, find keys and items and progress to the end of each maze like level. Combat in Blackthorne takes the form of gunfights. Both Blackthorne and his enemies can press against walls to avoid incoming bullets. Blackthorne can also fire blindly behind himself.
The game has seventeen levels within four areas - the mines of Androth, the Karrellian forests/swamps, the Wasteland desert, and Shadow keep. The Sega 32X version includes a fifth area, the snowy mountains, which is not found in the other versions of the game. As the game progresses through these areas, Kyle becomes stronger and better armed, but so do the enemies.
Brawl Brothers, known in Japan as Rushing Beat Ran: \"Rushing Beat Chaos: The City of Clones\"), is a side-scrolling beat \'em up game made by Jaleco in 1992 for the Super Nintendo Entertainment System.
Brawl Brothers is the second game in the Rushing Beat series (the first game was released in the U.S. as Rival Turf!). It was followed by the release of The Peace Keepers in 1993.
Breath of Fire, is a role-playing video game developed by Capcom originally for the Super Nintendo Entertainment System. Initially released in Japan in April 1993, the game was later made available in North America in August 1994 by Squaresoft, who handled the title\'s English localization and promotion. Recognized by Capcom as their first traditional console role-playing game, Breath of Fire would set the precedent for future entries in the series, and features character designs by company head of development Keiji Inafune, as well as music by members of Capcom\'s in-house sound team Alph Lyla. In 2001, the game was re-released for the Game Boy Advance handheld system with new save features and minor graphical enhancements, with the English version being released in Europe for the first time.
Breath of Fire II is a console role-playing game developed and published by Capcom. First released in 1994, the game was licensed to Laguna for European release in 1996. It is the second entry in the Breath of Fire series. It was later ported to Game Boy Advance and re-released worldwide. The game has been rated by the ESRB for release on Wii\'s Virtual Console. Nintendo of Europe\'s website mistakenly announced it for release on July 27, 2007, but it was in fact released two weeks later, on August 10, 2007. The game was released on the Virtual Console in North America on August 27, 2007.
Unlike later installments in the series, Breath of Fire II is a direct sequel to Breath of Fire. Set 500 years after the original game,[1] the story centers on an orphan named Ryu Bateson, whose family vanished mysteriously long ago. After his friend is falsely accused of a crime, Ryu embarks on a journey to clear his name.
Brutal: Paws of Fury (Animal Buranden - Brutal) is a Fighting game published by GameTek Inc. in 1994. The game features a full cast of anthropomorphic animals as selectable fighters. The game also featured an ability to learn new moves and save them via a password feature.