Power Bombcast: The Skin Doesn't Quite Fit
Giant Bomb Presents
Game Mess Mornings 05/03/24
GrubbSnax
The Community Spotlight 2024.05.04
The Community Spotlight 2024.04.27
The Community Spotlight 2024.04.20
Company »
Dragon Spirit is vertical arcade shooter released in 1987 by Namco and Atari. This page is for the updated Nintendo Entertainment System version, published in the US by Bandai.
Battle Fleet is a strategy game released only in Japan for the Nintendo Famicom
Namco's arcade game that also made it to the PlayStation. The original arcade version released in 1990 supported up to 28 players. Incredibly powerful for its time, the arcade game ran on up to 16 Namco System 21 "Polygonizer" arcade boards.
A multi-scrolling shoot 'em up with a spherical vehicle that can change the direction it shoots in, similar to Capcom's Forgotten Worlds.
A compilation of Namco(t) games for MSX.
The second game in the Megami Tensei franchise and the last to appear on the Nintendo Famicom.
Six titles for the MSX in this early Namco compilation.
Play pinball alone or in a double-ended competitive format in Rock 'n' Ball.
Bravoman spinoff starring one of the bosses of the first Bravoman game.
Marvel Land (known as Talmit's Adventure in Europe) is a 2D platformer developed and published by Namco and released on the Sega Genesis in 1991.
A top-down action-adventure game somewhat similar to The Legend of Zelda.
A 1989 Japan-only maze game from Namco
Vertically scrolling shooter from Namco. Take on hordes of biomechanical insectoid enemies in a spaceship that steadily gains extra parts.
Hit some dingers on the MSX.
A version of Famista with a Pennant Race mode
Players organize blocks of the same color to make them disappear.
A 1989 NES game from Namco's Mappy franchise.
Namco's baseball simulator for 1990.
Join Hiromi at the Earth Space Academy for six days of extreme shoot-em-up training!
An arcade ATV racing game for four players that was eventually ported to the Sega Genesis.
A horizontal side-scrolling Arcade shoot 'em up originally developed and released to Japanese Arcades by Namco in 1988, followed by a TurboGrafx-16 conversion. It is known for its bizarre comedic elements, reminiscent of Konami's Parodius or Masaya's Cho Aniki.
A robot-themed run-and-gun from Namco, initially released in arcades in 1989.
A bizarrely light-hearted "super-deformed" version of the ultra-gory Splatterhouse series beat-em-ups.
The fourth Famicom entry in the Family Stadium series shortens the official title to Famista.
A Fighter/RPG hybrid developed by Game Studio and published by Namco. It was only released in Japan, on July 21st 1989.
A racing game unique for having a separate RPG mode where it is possible to travel around a world map collecting upgradeable car parts. This mode is traditional top-down JRPG affair, with random encounters consisting of other racers challenging the player to a single lap. Losing means a trip back home sans winnings.
A puzzle game where you move tiles to push enemies into walls and blocks. Beware the dreaded respawn tile!
La Salle Ishii no Childs Quest is a 1989 role-playing game released for the Nintendo Famicom by Namco.
The title roughly translates to "Seal of Darkness". It is a Famicom exclusive action RPG released on April 27, 1989 in Japan and is a prequel to the 1985 game Dragon Buster.
A side-scrolling action adventure game based on the Go Nagai Devilman manga and anime. It was released for the NES by ISCO and Namco in Japan only.
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