Category
page 4PlayStation Network games

Metal Slug
1996 video game

Dragon Quest III
1988 role-playing video game

Mega Man 5
1992 video game

Samurai Shodown
1993 video game

Clock Tower
1995 horror video game

Fatal Frame II: Crimson Butterfly
2003 survival horror video game

Katamari Damacy
2004 video game

Gone Home
2013 first-person interactive story video game

Keep Talking and Nobody Explodes
2015 video game

Metal Gear Solid: Portable Ops
2006 video game

Sonic the Fighters
1996 fighting game developed by Sega AM2

Castle Crashers
2008 video game

God Hand
2006 video game

Child of Light
2014 video game

Streets of Rage 3
1994 video game

R-Type
is a 1987 horizontally scrolling shooter video game developed and published by Irem for arcades. The player controls the R-9 "Arrowhead" starship in its efforts to destroy the Bydo, a powerful alien race bent on wiping out all of mankind. The R-9 can acquire a glowing orb called a "Force", giving limited protection from enemy fire and providing additional firepower.

Hotline Miami 2: Wrong Number
2015 video game

Star Wars: Dark Forces
1995 video game

Altered Beast
1988 video game

Legend of Mana
1999 role-playing video game developed by Square

Harvest Moon: Save the Homeland
2001 video game

LSD
1998 video game

Mega Man X4
1997 video game developed by Capcom

Broforce
Broforce is a 2015 side-scrolling run and gun game developed by Free Lives and published by Devolver Digital. The game has the player as one of several "bros", based on popular culture action movie icons (for example, John Rambo and Ellen Ripley – "bro" treated as a gender neutral term), rescuing other "bros" through highly destructible environments.

Mega Man 10
2010 video game

flOw
2006 indie video game

Warriors Orochi
2007 video game

The King of Fighters '94
1994 fighting video game

Siren: Blood Curse
2008 video game

Tekken 5: Dark Resurrection
2005 video game

Disgaea: Hour of Darkness
2003 video game

Fighting Force
1997 video game

Peggle
Peggle is a casual puzzle video game developed by PopCap Games. Initially released for Microsoft Windows and Mac OS X systems in 2007, it has since had versions released for Xbox Live Arcade, PlayStation Network, the Nintendo DS (with the help of Q Entertainment), Windows Mobile, iOS, Zeebo, and Android; the game has also been ported as a Java application, and an extended minigame incorporated into the massively multiplayer online game World of Warcraft. A sequel was released in September 2008, titled Peggle Nights. PopCap, a subsidiary of Electronic Arts, announced Peggle 2 at E3 2013.

Dead or Alive
1996 video game

Bejeweled 2
2004 video game

Tom Clancy's Rainbow Six
1998 tactical shooter computer game and the first in the Rainbow Six series

Trine
2009 video game

Call of Juarez: Gunslinger
2013 first-person shooter video game

Sonic the Hedgehog 4: Episode II
2012 platform video game

Mickey Mania: The Timeless Adventures of Mickey Mouse
1994 video game developed by Traveller's Tales

Harvest Moon: A Wonderful Life
2003 video game

Gran Turismo HD Concept
2006 video game

Oddworld: Abe's Exoddus
1998 video game
Q16267631
2014 roguelike video game

Theme Park
1994 construction and management simulation game

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

Midnight Club: Street Racing
2000 racing video game

Dynasty Warriors 2
2000 video game

From Dust
2011 video game

Star Wars: Episode III – Revenge of the Sith
2005 video game

Chivalry: Medieval Warfare
2012 video game

Dynasty Warriors 4
2003 video game

Karateka
1984 video game

Oddworld: Stranger's Wrath
2005 video game

Warhawk
2007 video game

Dreamfall Chapters
Episodic 3D adventure game

Odin Sphere
2007 action role-playing game

Street Fighter Alpha 2
1996 arcade video game

Edge
2009 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.