Category
page 3Arcade video games

Track & Field
1983 arcade video game

Dead or Alive
1996 video game

Jackal
1988 video game

Feeding Frenzy
2004 video game

Race Driver: Grid
2008 racing video game by Codemasters

18 Wheeler: American Pro Trucker
2000 video game

Mappy
is a 1983 platform video game developed and published by Namco for arcades. It was released in Japan in March 1983 and in North America by Bally Midway in April 1983. It runs on Namco's Super Pac-Man hardware modified to support horizontal scrolling. The name "Mappy" is likely derived from , a slightly pejorative Japanese slang term for policeman. The game has been re-released in several Namco arcade compilations. It spawned a handful of sequels and a 2013 animated web series developed by cartoonists Scott Kurtz and Kris Straub.

Mario & Sonic at the Rio 2016 Olympic Games
2016 video game

Pinball
1984 video game

X-Men vs. Street Fighter
1996 video game

Clu Clu Land
1984 video game

Gauntlet
fantasy-themed hack and slash 1985 arcade game by Atari Games

Alex Kidd: The Lost Stars
1986 platform video game

Mario & Sonic at the Tokyo 2020 Olympic Games
2019 video game

Moon Patrol
1982 video game

Phoenix
1980 shoot 'em up arcade video game

Marvel vs. Capcom 2: New Age of Heroes
2000 video game

Elevator Action
1983 arcade game

Salamander
1986 shoot 'em up video game

Ikari Warriors
1986 video game

Wild Gunman
1984 video game

Killer Instinct
1994 video game

Pac-Land
is a 1984 platform game developed and published by Namco for arcades. It was released in North America by Bally Midway, and in Europe by Atari Games. Controlling Pac-Man, the player must make it to the end of each stage to return a lost fairy back to its home in Fairyland. Pac-Man will need to avoid obstacles, such as falling logs and water-spewing fire hydrants, alongside his enemies, the Ghost Gang. Eating large flashing Power Pellets will cause the ghosts to turn blue, allowing Pac-Man to eat them for points.

Golf
1984 sports video game

X-Men: Children of the Atom
1994 video game
Aikatsu!
is a multimedia franchise spawned from an arcade collectible card game in Bandai's Data Carddass line of machines, which launched in October 2012. The game revolves around using collectible cards featuring various clothes to help aspiring idols pass auditions. An anime television adaptation by Sunrise began airing on TV Tokyo from October 8, 2012, to March 31, 2016. In 2015, production switched from Sunrise to the studio's subsidiary Bandai Namco Pictures. Four films were released in December 2014, August 2015, August 2016, and January 2023 respectively. Three manga adaptations have been publi

Bertie the Brain
1950 video game

Battlezone
1980 video game

Virtua Racing
1992 racing game

NBA Jam
1993 video game

Urban Champion
1984 fighting video game
Q1754927
1995 racing video game

Guerrilla War
1987 video game

Garou: Mark of the Wolves
1999 fighting game

BurgerTime
(or in Japan) is an arcade video game by Data East released in 1982. According to a former Data East programmer, the game was designed in-house but the development itself was outsourced to another company.

Bad Dudes Vs. DragonNinja
1988 arcade game

Raiden
1990 scrolling shooter arcade game

Street Fighter Alpha 2
1996 arcade video game
Q738698
1984 platform arcade video game

F-Zero GX
2003 video game for Nintendo GameCube

Choplifter
Choplifter (stylized as Choplifter!) is a 1982 horizontally scrolling shooter video game developed by Dan Gorlin and published by Broderbund for the Apple II. It was ported to the Atari 8-bit computers the same year, and later to the VIC-20, Commodore 64, Atari 5200, ColecoVision, MSX, and Thomson computers. In 1985, Sega released a remake for arcades, with subsequent ports published for the Master System and Famicom in 1986. Graphically enhanced versions for the Atari 8-bit computers and the Atari 7800 were also released in 1988 by Atari Corporation.

WWF WrestleMania: The Arcade Game
1995 arcade video game

Ehrgeiz
, fully titled Ehrgeiz: God Bless the Ring, is a 1998 fighting game developed by DreamFactory and published by Namco for arcades. It was developed as a partnership between Square and DreamFactory. It was ported to the PlayStation, where Square released it internationally while Sony Computer Entertainment published it in Japan, a direct inversion of the companies' usual publishing deal.
Q288958
1987 video game

Karate Champ
1984 karate video game

Galaxy Game
1971 arcade game

Snow Bros.: Nick and Tom
1990 video game

Resident Evil Survivor 2 – Code: Veronica
2002 survival horror game developed and published by Capcom

Dead or Alive 2
1999 video game
Golden age of arcade video games
significant era in early video games history

City Connection
1985 video game

Samurai Shodown II
1994 arcade video game

Zaxxon
is a 1981 scrolling shooter video game developed by Sega with assistance from Ikegami Tsushinki and published by Sega for Japanese and European arcades; it was distributed by Sega/Gremlin in North America. The player pilots a ship through two heavily defended space fortresses, and the outer space areas between them, to confront the Zaxxon robot at the end of the second fortress.

Wonder Boy in Monster Land
1987 video game

Haunted Castle
1987 video game
Q289882
2001 video game

Rally-X
is a 1980 maze video game developed and published by Namco for arcades. It was released on October 3, 1980 in Japan, by Midway Manufacturing in North America in February 1981 and by Karateco in Europe in 1981. Players drive a blue Formula One race car through a multidirectional scrolling maze to collect yellow flags. Boulders block some paths and must be avoided. Red enemy cars pursue the player in an attempt to collide with them. Red cars can be temporarily stunned by laying down smoke screens at the cost of fuel. Rally-X is one of the first games with bonus stages and continuously playing ba

BlazBlue: Calamity Trigger
2008 fighting game

Super Pac-Man
1982 video game

Double Dragon 3: The Rosetta Stone
1990 video game