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Maze games

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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.
Sokoban
is a puzzle video game created in 1981 by Hiroyuki Imabayashi. In Sokoban, the player pushes boxes in a warehouse to get them onto storage locations. The game is viewed from a top-down perspective. Boxes can only be pushed, never pulled, and only one box can be pushed at a time. The principal challenge is planning moves correctly to avoid causing a deadlock, a situation where a box or the player becomes permanently trapped, making the puzzle unsolvable.
Ms. Pac-Man
1982 video game
Dig Dug
1982 arcade game created by Namco
Adventure
1980 action-adventure video game
Clu Clu Land
1984 video game
Edge
2009 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.
Bomberman II
1991 NES 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
Super Pac-Man
1982 video game
Devil World
1984 video game
Mr. Do!
1982 arcade video game
Pengo
1982 video game
Tank
1974 two-player arcade game
The Tower of Druaga
1984 video game
Sabre Wulf
1984 video game
Super Bomberman 3
1995 video game
Berzerk
1980 video game
The NewZealand Story
1988 video game
Amidar
Amidar is a maze video game developed by Konami and released in arcades in 1982. It was distributed in North America by Stern. Parker Brothers published an Atari 2600 version in late 1982, and Casio released a port for the PV-1000 in 1983. Amidar was the first in the grid capture sub-genre of maze games and was highly cloned in arcades and for home systems.
Super Bomberman 2
1994 Super NES game
Bomberman '94
video game by Hudson and part of their Bomberman franchise
Pac-Mania
is a 1987 maze video game developed and published by Namco for Japanese arcades; it was licensed to Atari Games for release in North America. In the game, the player controls Pac-Man as he must eat all of the dots while avoiding the colored ghosts that chase him in the maze. Eating large flashing "Power Pellets" will allow Pac-Man to eat the ghosts for bonus points, which lasts for a short period of time. A new feature to this game allows Pac-Man to jump over the ghosts to evade capture. It is the ninth title in the Pac-Man video game series and was the last one developed for arcades up until
Saturn Bomberman
1996 video game
The Last Guy
2008 video game
Super Bomberman 5
1997 video game
Gotcha
1973 video game
Atic Atac
1983 video game
Digger
1983 video game
Pac-Man
1982 video game
Super Bomberman 4
1996 video game
Super Bomberman
1993 Super NES game
Atomic Bomberman
1997 video game
Jack Bros.
1995 video game
Crystal Castles
1983 video game
Bomberman
1990 video game by Hudson Soft for PC
Labyrinth: The Computer Game
1986 video game
Neo Bomberman
1997 video game
list of maze video games
Wikimedia list article
Pac-Man Championship Edition
2007 video game developed by Bandai Namco Games
Pac-Man 99
2021 battle royale video game for Nintendo Switch
Oil's Well
1983 video game
Crazy Arcade
2001 video game
Pac & Pal
1983 video game
Jungler
Jungler is an arcade maze game developed by Konami and released in 1981. Distributed by Stern in the United States beginning in 1982, the game has players controlling a multi-segmented creature attempting to destroy similar enemy creatures by either shooting them or eating them. A sequel titled Battle Jungler was planned for the PC Engine on 1992, but was cancelled.
New Rally-X
1981 video game
Shadow Labyrinth
2025 video game
Head On
1979 video game
Radar Rat Race
1981 video game
Pac-Man Vs.
2003 multiplayer video game developed by Nintendo
Jr. Pac-Man
1983 Retro/Arcade Game
Dig Dug: Digging Strike
2005 video game
Route-16
is a 1981 maze video game developed and published by Sun Electronics for arcades. The game was released by Tehkan (not yet a video game developer by its release) in Europe and Centuri in North America. It was ported to the Arcadia 2001 console. An enhanced version was released in Japan as Route-16 Turbo for the Famicom in 1985.
Death Squared
2017 puzzle video game
Bomberman '93
1992 video game
Bomberman Party Edition
1998 video game
Wizard of Wor
1981 video game
Bomberman Online
2001 video game
Robin of the Wood
Maze game published in 1985 by Odin Computer Graphics