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1986 video games

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Kid Niki: Radical Ninja
1986 arcade video game
Labyrinth: The Computer Game
1986 video game
Valis: The Fantasm Soldier
1987 video game
Action Fighter
1986 video game
10th Frame
1986 video game
The Transformers
1986 video game
Hopping Mappy
1985 video game
Deadly Towers
1986 RPG video game
Slalom
1986 alpine skiing video game
Stinger
1986 NES game
Nobunaga's Ambition: Zenkokuban
1986 video game
Trojan
1986 arcade video game
The Sentinel
1986 video game
Bird Week
1986 video game
Uridium
Uridium (released for the NES as The Last Starfighter) is a horizontally scrolling shooter designed by Andrew Braybrook for the Commodore 64 and published by Hewson Consultants in 1986. The game consists of fifteen levels, each named after a metal element, with the last level being the fictional metallic element Uridium. The manual quotes Robert Orchard, who invented the name, as saying "I really thought it existed".
Mystery Tower
1986 video game
Legendary Wings
1986 video game
Gauntlet II
1986 arcade video game
Ace of Aces
video game (World War II flight simulator), released in 1986
Stadium Events
1986 Nintendo Entertainment System game
Volleyball
1986 volleyball video game
Ghost House
Japanese 1986 action game developed by Sega
JaJaMaru no Daibouken
1986 video game
Valkyrie no Bōken: Toki no Kagi Densetsu
1986 video game
Shanghai
1986 video game
King's Knight
video game by Workss & Square
Empire City: 1931
1987 video game
World Cup Carnival
video game from 1986
Thanatos
1986 video game
Knightmare
1986 Konami video game on MSX standard platform
Super Xevious: GAMP no Nazo
1986 video game
Leather Goddesses of Phobos
1986 video game
Iwo Jima
1986 video game
Chiller
1986 video game
Arcticfox
Arcticfox is a science fiction tank simulation video game developed by Dynamix and published by Electronic Arts in 1986. It was published in Europe by Ariolasoft. A sequel to Dynamix's Stellar 7, it was released on Atari ST, Commodore 64, ZX Spectrum, MS-DOS, and Apple II. A third game was released in the series in 1991 titled Nova 9: The Return of Gir Draxon.
Starglider
Starglider is a 3D video game published in 1986 by Rainbird. It was developed by Jez San under his company name Argonaut Software. The game is a fast-moving, first-person combat flight simulator, rendered with colourful wireframe vector graphics inspired by San's love of the 1983 Atari coin-op Star Wars.
Banana
1986 video game
Atlantis no Nazo
1986 video game
Momoko 120%
1986 video game
Quartet
1986 arcade game by Sega
Aliens: The Computer Game
1987 video game
Army Moves
1986 video game
Romancia
, also known as Dragon Slayer Jr., is an action-adventure game developed by Nihon Falcom. It is the third installment in the Dragon Slayer series, preceded by Xanadu and followed by Dragon Slayer IV.
Rambo: First Blood Part II
1986 video game
Crackout
1986 video game
Trinity
1986 video game
Xain'd Sleena
1986 video game
Dan Dare: Pilot of the Future
1986 video game
Moonmist
Moonmist is an interactive fiction game written by Stu Galley and Jim Lawrence and published by Infocom in 1986. The game was released simultaneously for the Amiga, Amstrad CPC, Apple II, Atari 8-bit computers, Atari ST, Commodore 64, MS-DOS, TRS-80, TI-99/4A, and Mac. It is Infocom's twenty-second game. Moonmist was re-released in Infocom's 1995 compilation The Mystery Collection, as well as the 1996 compilation Classic Text Adventure Masterpieces.
Tōkaidō Gojūsan-tsugi
1986 video game
The Colour of Magic
1986 video game
Kiki Kaikai
1986 video game
Cruise Chaser Blassty
1986 video game
Baltron
is a horizontally scrolling shooter for the Family Computer that was released exclusively for the Japanese market on March 19, 1986.
Dark Castle
1986 computer game
PHM Pegasus
1986 video game
Space Hunter
1986 video game
Dracula
1986 text adventure game
Enduro Racer
1986 video game
Falklands '82
1986 video game