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Commodore 64 games

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Mercs
Mercs, released as in Japan, is a 1990 run and gun video game developed and published by Capcom for arcades. It is a sequel to the 1985 arcade video game Commando ( in Japan). While not as successful as its predecessor, Mercs was well received by critics and was a moderate commercial success. It was followed by Wolf of the Battlefield: Commando 3 in 2008, a downloadable game.
The Lords of Midnight
1984 video game
James Pond 2: Codename: RoboCod
1991 video game
Little Computer People
1985 video game
Smash TV
1990 video game
The Simpsons
1991 video game
Blockout
Blockout is a puzzle video game published in 1989 by California Dreams. It was developed in Poland by Aleksander Ustaszewski and Mirosław Zabłocki. American Technos published an arcade version. Blockout is a 3D version of the Tetris concept.
International Karate +
1987 video game
Q493675
1986 military helicopter video game
Karnov
is a 1987 platform game developed and published by Data East for arcades. A Nintendo Entertainment System port followed, which was released in Japan by Namco the same year and in North America by Data East in 1988. Players take control of the title character Jinborov Karnovski, or "Karnov" for short. Karnov is a strongman popularly illustrated as being from an unspecified part of the Soviet Union's Central Asian republics, as shown on the arcade flyer.
World Championship Soccer
1989 association football video game by Sega
Classic Empire
wargame
Starflight
Starflight is a space exploration, combat, and trading role-playing video game created by Binary Systems and published by Electronic Arts in 1986. Originally developed for IBM PC compatibles, it was later ported to the Amiga, Atari ST, Mac, and Commodore 64. A fully revamped version of the game was released for the Genesis in 1991.
Cabal
1988 video game
Puzznic
is a tile-matching video game developed and released by Taito for arcades in 1989. It was converted to the Nintendo Entertainment System, Game Boy, PC Engine, X68000, Amiga, Atari ST, Amstrad CPC, Commodore 64, MS-DOS, and ZX Spectrum between 1990 and 1991. Home computer ports were handled by Ocean Software; the 2003 PlayStation port was handled by Altron. The arcade and FM Towns versions have adult content, showing a naked woman at the end of the level; this was removed in the international arcade release (but not the US one) and other home ports. The completed Apple IIGS port was never offic
720°
720° is a 1986 sports video game developed and published by Atari Games for arcades. Based on the sport of skateboarding, the player controls a skateboarder as they compete in various skating competitions, such as ramp jumping and downhill races, to earn cash.
Psycho Soldier
1987 video game
Yie Ar Kung-Fu II
1986 video game
Congo Bongo
1983 video game
Die Hard
1991 video game
F-15 Strike Eagle
1985 war video game
Operation Thunderbolt
1988 video game
Demon Attack
1982 fixed shooter video game
Midnight Resistance
1989 video game
Black Tiger
1987 video game
Q2316017
1990 video game
Adventureland
1978 video game
Victory Road
1986 video game
Pit-Fighter
Pit-Fighter is a 1990 fighting game developed and published by Atari Games for arcades. The Japanese release was published by Konami. Home versions were published by Tengen.
DragonStrike
1990 video game
Q2465356
1988 video game
Super Sprint
1986 video game
Donald Duck's Playground
1984 video game
Barbarian: The Ultimate Warrior
1987 video game
Vigilante
1988 arcade video game
Heroes of the Lance
1988 video game
Ski or Die
1990 winter sport video game
RoboCop
1988 video game
World Games
1986 video game
Kid Niki: Radical Ninja
1986 arcade video game
Budokan: The Martial Spirit
1989 computer and video game
Championship Lode Runner
1985 video game
Fantasy World Dizzy
1989 video game
Arkanoid: Revenge of Doh
1987 video game
Labyrinth: The Computer Game
1986 video game
Lamborghini American Challenge
1992 racing video game
Rambo III
1989 video game by Ocean Software
WWF WrestleMania
1991 video game
Target: Renegade
1988 video game
Out Run Europa
1991 video game
Head over Heels
1987 arcade adventure video game
Q3093019
1993 video game
Neuromancer
1988 video game
Last Battle
1989 video game
Q3394083
1983 video game
Silent Service
1985 video game
Special Criminal Investigation
1989 video game
Q867164
Canabalt is a one-button endless runner designed by Adam Saltsman for the Experimental Gameplay Project in 2009. The 2D side-scrolling video game was originally written as a Flash game, then ported to iOS, Android, PlayStation Portable, Ouya, and HTML5. An authorized version for the Commodore 64 called C64anabalt was released on cartridge. Canabalt has been credited with popularizing the endless runner subgenre.
DuckTales: The Quest for Gold
1990 platform video game
Rolling Thunder
1986 video game