Power Bombcast: The Skin Doesn't Quite Fit
Giant Bomb Presents
Game Mess Mornings 05/03/24
GrubbSnax
The Community Spotlight 2024.04.27
The Community Spotlight 2024.04.20
The Community Spotlight 2024.04.13
Company »
A 3D platform action game only released in Japan in 1997 which is based on a Japanese manga.
A Doraemon action game for PlayStation
A soccer game created by A-Max and released in 1996. It is the third in their J-League Excite Stage series that focuses on Japan's top national league.
A Doraemon 2.5D Platformer for Saturn and PlayStation
The fourth and final Doraemon platformer for the Super Famicom. Doraemon and friends decide to visit the moon.
A licensed golf video game released in 1995 for the Super Famicom.
An adventure game using the Super Famicom Mouse. There are two modes: story, and paint.
A Donald Duck licensed platformer released in 1995 for the Super Famicom.
A four-player soccer game created by A-Max and released in 1995. The second game in the Excite Stage series.
Side-scrolling Spider-Man game only released in Japan for the Super Famicom. Loosely based on a 1993 Marvel Comics storyline called "The Lethal Foes of Spider-Man."
A side-scrolling action game featuring Monkey Punch's gentleman thief Arsene Lupin III. It was released on the Super Famicom in 1994.
The third game in Epoch's trilogy of Super Famicom licensed platformers based on the eponymous robotic cat. Doraemon and Nobita travel back in time to replace a priceless dinosaur bone, but change the future in the process.
Soccer game developed by A-Max and released by Capcom for the Super Nintendo system. Known in Japan as "J.League Excite Stage '94".
A platformer with adventure games elements featuring the robotic cat Doraemon released for the Super Famicom by SAS Sakata. It follows Doraemon: Nobita to Yousei no Kuni.
A comedic baseball game for the Super Famicom. It's one of a handful of games compatible with Epoch's Barcode Battler device.
A strategy RPG that operated in tandem with Epoch's Barcode Battler. A special version of the game came with a Super Famicom adapter for the device.
An adventure game with action levels based on the Doraemon license, about a robotic cat and his human friends. It's the first of several Super Famicom adaptations of Doraemon.
A Doraemon action game for Game Boy.
A Game Boy spin-off in the Dragon Slayer franchise.
A turn-based fantasy RPG and the sequel to Nihon Falcom's Dragon Slayer: The Legend of Heroes. The story of the original game continues a few years later with the previous game's hero's son, Prince Atlas.
A Chibi Maruko-Chan boardgame for Super Nintendo.
A fantasy RTS game developed by Nihon Falcom that was originally released for the NEC PC-9801 in 1991 and later ported to the FM Towns and Super Famicom, followed by many other enhanced versions.
Plan and explore a way through first-person dungeons before the power runs out in this Japan-only Famicom title developed by Epoch.
A cartoony platformer from SAS Sakata and Epoch, based on the anime of the same name from Fujiko A. Fujio.
This was only released in Japan, on September 14th 1990.
Kiteretsu Daihyakka is an NES game based on the Fujiko Fujio manga and anime of the same name.
This baseball game from Epoch has a lot in common with Namco's Family Stadium series.
Wrestling game for Super Cassette Vision
The first game based on the Dragon Ball manga and anime series, Dragon Ball: Dragon Daihikyou is a vertical shoot-em-up players control Goku on his Flying Nimbus cloud.
This edit will also create new pages on Giant Bomb for:
Until you earn 1000 points all your submissions need to be vetted by other Giant Bomb users. This process takes no more than a few hours and we'll send you an email once approved.
Use your keyboard!
Log in to comment
Log in to comment