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Famicom Disk System games

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Super Mario Bros.
1985 platform video game
Pac-Man
Pac-Man, originally titled in Japan, is a 1980 maze video game developed and published by Namco for arcades. It was released in Japan on May 22, 1980 and by Midway Manufacturing in North America in August 1980. The player controls Pac-Man, who must eat all the dots inside an enclosed maze while avoiding four colored ghosts. Eating large flashing dots called "Power Pellets" causes the ghosts to temporarily turn blue and vulnerable, allowing Pac-Man to eat the ghosts for bonus points.
Donkey Kong
1981 arcade game
Q12395
1986 action-adventure video game
Super Mario Bros. 2
1988 platform video game developed by Nintendo
Super Mario Bros.: The Lost Levels
1986 video game developed by Nintendo
Zelda II: The Adventure of Link
1987 video game
Mario Bros.
1983 arcade game
Donkey Kong Jr.
1982 arcade game
Q88759
1986 video game
Excitebike
is a 1984 racing video game developed and published by Nintendo for the Nintendo Entertainment System. It was ported to arcades for the Nintendo VS. System later that year and Famicom Disk System in 1988. In North America, it became one of the best-selling games on the console. It was the first game in the Excite series.
Metroid
1986 action-adventure shooter video game
Ice Climber
1985 video game developed by Nintendo
Galaxian
is a 1979 fixed shooter video game developed and published by Namco for arcades. The player assumes control of the Galaxip starfighter in its mission to protect Earth from waves of aliens. Gameplay involves destroying each formation of aliens, who dive down towards the player in an attempt to hit them.
Dig Dug
1982 arcade game created by Namco
Castlevania
1986 video game
Wrecking Crew
1985 video game
Bomberman
1983 video game
Kid Icarus
1986 video game
Castlevania II: Simon's Quest
1987 video game
Q1514023
1985 arcade game
Q1327963
is a 1983 vertically scrolling shooter video game developed and published by Namco for arcades. It was released in Japan and in North America by Atari, Inc. in February 1983. Controlling the Solvalou starship, the player attacks Xevious forces before they destroy all of mankind. The Solvalou has two weapons at its disposal: a zapper to destroy flying craft, and a blaster to bomb ground installations and enemies. It runs on the Namco Galaga arcade system.
Tennis
1984 sports video game
Clu Clu Land
1984 video game
Pinball
1984 video game
Baseball
1983 baseball video game for the NES
Jackal
1988 video game
Golf
1984 sports video 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.
Karate Champ
1984 karate video game
Soccer
1985 video game
Knight Lore
1984 video game
Blades of Steel
1987 ice hockey video game by Konami
Dig Dug II
1985 video game
TwinBee
is a 1985 vertically scrolling shooter video game developed and published by Konami for arcades. Along with Sega's Fantasy Zone (1986), it is credited as an early archetype of the "cute 'em up" subgenre. It was the first game to run on Konami's Bubble System hardware. TwinBee was ported to the Family Computer and MSX in 1986, and has been included in numerous compilations released in later years. The original arcade game was released outside Japan for the first time as part of the Nintendo DS compilation Konami Classics Series: Arcade Hits. A mobile phone version with edited graphics was relea
Gyruss
is a 1983 tube shooter video game developed and published by Konami for Japanese arcades. It was initially licensed to Centuri in North America for dedicated machines before Konami released their own self-distributed conversion kits for the game. Parker Brothers released ports for the Atari 2600, Atari 5200, Atari 8-bit computers, ColecoVision and Commodore 64 in 1984. An enhanced version for the Famicom Disk System was released in 1988, followed by the Nintendo Entertainment System in 1989.
Ice Hockey
1988 Nintendo ice hockey video game
Zanac
is a scrolling shooter video game developed by Compile and published in Japan by Pony Canyon and in North America by FCI. It was released for the MSX computer, the Family Computer Disk System, the Nintendo Entertainment System, and for the Virtual Console. It was reworked for the MSX2 computer as Zanac EX and for the PlayStation as Zanac X Zanac. Players fly a lone starfighter, dubbed the AFX-6502 Zanac, through twelve levels; their goal is to destroy the System—a part-organic, part-mechanical entity bent on destroying mankind.
The Bugs Bunny Crazy Castle
1989 video game
The Tower of Druaga
1984 video game
Solomon's Key
1986 puzzle game
Yume Kōjō: Doki Doki Panic
1987 platform video game
Puyo Puyo
1991 video game
The Goonies
1986 platform video game
Winter Games
1985 winter sports video game
Little Computer People
1985 video game
The 3-D Battles of Worldrunner
1987 video game
Pro Wrestling
1986 NES video game
Section Z
1985 arcade game
The Mysterious Murasame Castle
1986 Famicom Disk System game
Tama and Friends
Japanese anime television series
Volleyball
1986 volleyball video game
Gun.Smoke
is a 1985 vertically scrolling shooter video game developed and published by Capcom for arcades. Unique from other scrolling shooters games, Gun.Smoke features a human as the shooter instead of a spacecraft, in this case a character named Billie Bob, a bounty hunter going after the criminals of the Wild West. It was designed by Yoshiki Okamoto.
Bio Miracle Bokutte Upa
1988 video game
Stinger
1986 NES game
list of best-selling Nintendo Entertainment System games
Wikimedia list article
Dr. Chaos
1987 video game
Famicom Detective Club
series of adventure video games
Pachicom
is a parlor video game released for multiple platforms that is themed around pachinko. It was released in 1985 exclusively to the Japanese market.
Kiki Kaikai
1986 video game