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An action-puzzle game where an octopus at the center of the playfield clears a bunch of barrels that are closing in from both ends of the screen by sucking them in and spitting them out to match.
Kotoba no Puzzle: Mojipittan is a Japanese croswords-esque puzzle game.
A background-shooter arcade game by Mitchell that is set in feudal Japan (with guns).
A spin-off of the Mr. Driller series, using one-button controls. Move around in space by hopping orbit-to-orbit, forming triangular nets to rescue helpless aliens.
The fourth and final entry in Metro's Toride series of mahjong solitaire games, featuring two unique variations: Gekitoride and Jan Space. It was later released for the PS2 as part of the budget Simple series.
The final Golgo-13 arcade light-gun shooter from Eighting/Raizing and Namco.
An updated Japan-exclusive revision of Mr. Driller 2, adding a variety of playable characters (including the Dig Dug protagonist) with their own abilities.
A light gun shooter for the PlayStation and arcades.
The second Golgo-13 arcade lightgun game from Raizing and Namco.
Bust a Groove 2 is the sequel to music/fighting game by Metro Graphics, Bust a Groove. It introduces new characters with a brand new song selection.
In this sequel to the popular arcade puzzle game, Susumu and Anna dig deep into the ground in order to prevent the world from being overrun by colored blocks.
A Japan-exclusive arcade game featuring comedic truck driving.
From the creators of the Point Blank series, Ghoul Panic is a 3D first person light gun adventure released on the PlayStation and designed for use with the G-Con45. Players must shoot their way through a haunted mansion, taking out ghosts, ghouls, mummies, and the like as they go.
A Golgo-13 arcade lightgun shooter from Raizing, published by Namco.
A 1999 arcade puzzle game from Namco. Similar to Tetris, but instead of rotating blocks, you change their shape.
Taiko no Tatsujin is a music/rhythm arcade game by Namco, where player must hit taiko drums in time to the music. Since its release in 1999, it has seen annual revisions.
The city is over run with colored blocks! GO MR. DRILLER!
Um Jammer Lammy is a rhythm-based game that takes place in the PaRappa world and tells the story of the all-girl pop rock band, MilkCan. The game has very humorous and catchy music tracks, co-op gameplay, and a plethora of unlockables.
The fourth main installment of the Tekken franchise compiles nearly every character featured in the series' three previous games. It also adds a "tag team" mechanic for two-on-two battles.
A 3D fighting game featuring free-form movement and guest characters from Square's hit JRPG Final Fantasy VII. The console version features a bonus action RPG built from the "Quest Mode" in the developer's earlier Tobal series.
An obscure 3D fighting game, only released in Japanese arcades, from the creators of the Street Fighter EX series. Also the only fighting game where you can punch a shark in the face.
A minigame-centric arcade release from Namco, which focuses on many aspects of the vertically-scrolling shoot-em-up genre.
Libero Grande is a football game for the PlayStation released in 1998. It is known for being one of the first games where the player controls a single football player.
While grossly overlooked in the U.S. market, Bust A Groove served as a gateway for many Japanese music game fans in the late 1990s, arriving on the scene courtesy of Enix and 989 Studios hot on the heels of Parappa the Rapper.
An arcade train driving game based on Tomy's Plarail line of electric toy train sets.
The sequel to Namco's earlier fighting game Soul Edge, continuing the story of the cursed blade "Soul Edge" (now corrupting the noble knight Siegfried into the dreaded knight Nightmare).
Third entry in the popular wrestling series.
Puzzle Star Sweep (aka "StarSweep") is a puzzle game that released in Japan in 1997, and was finally brought to the west in 2000 (UK) and 2001 (US).
A sequel in 3-D to the "Xevious" saga.
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