Category
page 1Namco games

Tekken 7
2015 3D fighting video game

Tekken 8
2024 fighting game developed by Bandai Namco Studios

Battle City
1985 video game

Dig Dug
1982 arcade game created by Namco

Ace Combat 3
flight simulation game

Tekken Tag Tournament
1999 video game

R4: Ridge Racer Type 4
Racing game created by Namco in 1998

Air Combat
1995 video game

Ace Combat 7: Skies Unknown
2019 action combat flight simulator video game

Zero Wing
1989 side-scrolling shoot 'em up arcade game

Ace Combat 2
1997 video game

Katamari Damacy
2004 video game

Sniper Elite
2005 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.

Ace Combat 5: The Unsung War
2004 video game

Ridge Racer 64
2000 video game

Baten Kaitos: Eternal Wings and the Lost Ocean
2003 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.

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
Taiko no Tatsujin
video game series

Klonoa: Door to Phantomile
1997 video game

Super Pac-Man
1982 video game

Dragon Ball Xenoverse 2
2016 fighting role-playing video game

Tekken Advance
2001 video game

Mario Superstar Baseball
2005 video game

The Idolmaster
2005 simulation arcade video game

Star Fox: Assault
2005 video game developed by Bandai Namco Entertainment

Namco × Capcom
2005 tactical role-playing crossover video game developed by Monolith Soft

Tales of Xillia
2011 video game

Ridge Racer Revolution
1995 video game

Ridge Racer 6
2005 video game

Rage Racer
1996 video game

Tekken 3D: Prime Edition
2012 video game
Tekken X Street Fighter
cancelled video game

Ridge Racer V
2000 video game

Yokai Dochuki
arcade game by Namco

R.B.I. Baseball
1986 video game

Air Buster
1990 video game

R: Racing Evolution
2003 video game

We Love Katamari
2005 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.

Bust a Groove
1998 video game

Rolling Thunder
1986 video game

The Idolmaster 2
2011 Japanese simulation video game

Klonoa 2: Lunatea's Veil
2001 video game

Mappy-Land
is a platform game developed by Tose and published by Namco for the Nintendo Entertainment System. It is a sequel to Namco's 1983 arcade video game Mappy. Originally released in 1986, it was released by Taxan in North America in 1989.

Vampire Night
2000 video game

Time Crisis 3
2003 video game

Klonoa: Empire of Dreams
2001 video game

Mr. Driller
2000 video game

Kill.switch
2003 video game
Pac 'n Roll
2005 video game

Arc the Lad: End of Darkness
2004 video game

Grobda
is a 1984 multidirectional shooter video game developed and published by Namco for Japanese arcades. It is a spin-off from Xevious, as the player's tank first appeared in that game as an enemy. It runs on Namco Super Pac-Man hardware but with a video system like that used in Mappy and The Tower of Druaga, and it also uses a DAC for the "Get Ready" speech sample at the start of each round.

Kaze no Klonoa: Moonlight Museum
1999 video game

Ghosthunter
2003 video game

Ridge Racer
2004 video game

Sky Kid
1985 arcade video game

Mappy Kids
1989 video game

Star Wars
1987 video game