Thanks for the Steamkey, Gary -- it's 2020's OUT OF SPACE from Behold Studios. A multiplayer space station sim with an interesting sense of humor, I'm diggin it!
Awesome video, thanks so much for this video catalog of great games! We now get to a period where a lot of the games look like Saturn or PS1 games, and of course some of them were indeed ported over there (including some real favorites: especially shooters, fighters, light-gun games). But there are plenty of surprises: - Biomechanical Toy, Desert War, MS Gundam Final Shooting, and Pirates look amazing -- I wanna play them right now! - Manx TT & Sky Target both had so-so home conversions on Saturn, but both look sweet in the arcade. - I never played Avengers in Galactic Storm, looks fun! Must have been one of Data East's last fighting games, and you would have thought it would have a home conversion with the Marvel connection ... but it had none until the currently-in-production Arcade 1UP 4-player X-Men cabinet (maybe the best from 1UP?!) - Surprised that Data East would release Backfire! and Kaneko would release Mille Miglia, old school isometric racers at such a late date and with so much more sophisticated racing game competition from Namco & Sega. At least Gaelco with World Rally 2 had a H2H gameplay mode, presumably on two screens. Speaking of the competition, it looks like several of Namco & Sega's awesome racing games never got home conversions even back then. They must have ben concerned about saturating the market? - Quite a few quiz games & puzzle-stacking games, just like on consoles of the time. I played hundreds of hours of Puzzle Bobble 2 back in the 90s, and so did my girlfriend at the time, so that's probably my most played/worn PS1 disc. Also a burst of games with Qix gameplay to uncover the pretty girl, which didn't make it home so often ... All three genres must have been pretty cheap to program, and reliable sources of income in arcades/bars. - Dragon Might is a cool looking fighter from Konami, reminiscent of their classic beatemups in its look. - Seeing Maddoman/Mudman in World Heroes Perfect gives me flashbacks -- that guy was so difficult to beat, ugh! - I don't know about you, but the prospect of playing Othello Derby against a virtual chimp woud certainly have brought me into the arcade quite often in 1995.
I found that 1995 was the year of Namco. To be blunt, I feel they dominated. So many heavy hitters like Soul Edge, Tekken, Ace Combat - franchises that are around even today - that were technologically ahead of everyone else. Capcom was still pumping out fighters - although highly polished (except maybe Street Fighter: The Movie), was looking quite technologically out of date. Even Sega who, just a few years earlier was blazing trails with 3 D technology seemed to have fallen a bit behind. An interesting discovery - as you mentioned - that some pretty cool racers from Sega and Namco didn't make it home! Cool Riders, Cyber Cycles, Rave Racer... Otherwise this was pretty much the year of the 1v1 fighting game! Sure there were a couple of interesting variants like Metamoqester - and I had no idea that Jackie Chan was digitized into a game - but this was, I think, a saturation point. The sad part is that most of them are competent and playable (compared to the experimental fighters from previous years) - but with titles like Voltage Fighter, Dragon Might, World Heroes etc. the market was just overloaded. If I had walked into an arcade and seen 2 dozen different fighting games, I probably would have just ignored them all and gone to play Sky Target... Definitely interesting that old school isometric racers were getting pumped out. Indeed it's hard to imagine back then anyone choosing to play one of those over their more hi-tech competition. BUT interestingly, when assembling this video - I actually spent more time with Kaneko's entry than Sega/Namcos... Oh and of course - we have to acknowledge the smut. Nothing like a little bit of nudity to entice a few quarters from a player ... And chimps + othello + derby racing = major WTF Japan?
Great vid. There's 40 I wanna try, 20 I knew of being arcade games and 2 I have played. I did order War Gods on N64 a bit ago and it should come in some time soon. Good choices of fighter in the fighting games, Shaia ands Karin in Gowcaizer, Mai Shiranui in KOF, The ones people care about
I configured Zombie Raid with Sinden lightgun last night. Just a tip... if you use FinalBurn Neo core you can use run-ahead lag reduction, it makes a difference in rail shooters. I chopped out 3 frames of lag.
Her zamanki gibi yine kapsamlı bir çalışma olmuş. İyi ve güzel bir video. Bu çalışmaların için teşekkürler. Fakat devamını beklediğimi bilmelisin. : ) Çünkü böylesine güzel işlere bizi alıştırdın.
Check your facts. Read: virtuafighter.fandom.com/wiki/Virtua_Fighter_Remix "It also had an arcade release on the ST-V (an arcade platform based on the Sega Saturn)"
They are both in the 1994 video -- ruclips.net/video/DMss6qwcLss/видео.html WIkipedia lists them as being released in 1995 - but MAME lists them as a 1994 release. These videos used the MAME dates.
@@GaryRetroGamer Other than physically being at the arcade in my mall when it came out in April of 1995...no. Then 6 months later it came out on SNES and Ultimate MK3 was released in arcades. I was like well..WTF? I felt cheated. So yeah. All I can say was "I was there."
@@bryansteele832 Ohhh, man - I also remember being annoyed about that UlimateMK3 release so close to the original release! Having said that, it may have been released to your local arcade in 1995 - but that doesn't mean it couldn't have released earlier in other markets/arcades - so, I'm going to assume that MAME is still correct. If you can find something that proves otherwise though - please let me know and I'll post an errata!
COMPLETE GAME LIST
001 - 2 On 2 Open Ice Challenge
002 - Action Hollywood
003 - Aero Fighters 3 _ Sonic Wings 3
004 - Air Combat 22
005 - Area 51 - Atari Games
006 - Avengers In Galactic Storm
007 - Backfire!
008 - Baku Baku Animal
009 - Battle Arena Toshinden 2 - Tamsoft
010 - Battle Balls - Seibu Kaihatsu
011 - Big Twin - Playmark
012 - Biomechanical Toy
013 - Bubble Memories-The Story Of Bubble Bobble III
014 - Candy Puzzle
015 - Cannon Ball - Yun Sung
016 - Chain Reaction_Magical Drop
017 - Charlie Ninja - Mitchell
018 - Chibi Maruko-chan_ Maruko Deluxe Quiz
019 - Choky! Choky!
020 - Cookie & Bibi
021 - Cool Riders
022 - Critter Crusher
023 - Crypt Killer
024 - Cyber Cycles
025 - Cyber Troopers Virtual-On
026 - Cyberbots-Fullmetal Madness
027 - Deroon DeroDero
028 - Desert War - Wangan Sensou
029 - Dirt Dash
030 - Dolmen - Afega
031 - Don Den Lover Vol. 1 - Shiro Kuro Tsukeyo! - Dynax
032 - DonPachi - Cave
033 - Double Dragon
034 - Double Point - Min Corp
035 - Dragon Might
036 - Dragon World - IGS
037 - Dunk Dream '95
038 - Dunk Mania
039 - Egg Hunt - Invi Image
040 - Ejihon Tantei Jimusyo
041 - Extreme Downhill
042 - Fantasy '95 - Hi-max
043 - Far East of Eden - Kabuki Klash - Racdym
044 - Fatal Fury 3 - Road to the Final Victory
045 - Fighting Vipers
046 - Final Lap R
047 - Fishin' Frenzy (prototype) - Time Warner
048 - Five a Side Soccer
049 - From TV Animation Slam Dunk - Super Slams
050 - Funky Head Boxers
051 - Galaxy Fight - Universal Warriors
052 - Gals Panic 3
053 - Game Paradise, The - Master of Shooting!
054 - Ganbare Ginkun
055 - Gekirindan
056 - Goal! Goal! Goal!
057 - Gogetsuji Legends
058 - Golden Tee 3D Golf
059 - Guardians - Winkysoft
060 - Gunblade NY
061 - Gundhara
062 - Harem Challenge
063 - Hatch Catch
064 - Honey Dolls
065 - Hot Mind - Playmark
066 - Hot Pinball - Comad & New Japan System
067 - Hyper Pacman
068 - Indy 500 Twin
069 - Intergirl
070 - Jackie Chan - The Kung-Fu Master
071 - Jackie Chan in Fists of Fire
072 - Janken Game Acchi Muite Hoi!
073 - Kick Goal
074 - Killer Instinct 2 - Rare
075 - King of Fighters '95
076 - Laser Strixx 2
077 - Last KM
078 - Mach Breakers
079 - Mad Donna
080 - Magic Number
081 - Magical Touch - Micro Manufacturing
082 - Magix _ Rock - Yun Sung
083 - Manx TT Superbike
084 - Marvel Super Heroes
085 - Mega Man_ The Power Battle
086 - Metamoqester
087 - Midnight Run - Road Fighter 2
088 - Mille Miglia 2_ Great 1000 Miles Rally
089 - Mobile Suit Gundam Final Shooting
090 - Monopoly Classic - JPM
091 - Monopoly Deluxe - JPM
092 - Mouse Shooter GoGo - Metro
093 Classic Collection Vol.1
094 - Nettoh Quiz Champion - Nakanihon
095 - New Fantasia (1995 copyright) - Comad & New Japan System
096 - Night Warriors_ Darkstalkers' Revenge
097 - Nouryoku Koujou Iinkai
098 - Othello Derby - Sunwise
099 - Outlaws of the Lost Dynasty
100 - P-47 Aces
101 - Pang! 3 - Mitchell
102 - Party Time_ Gonta the Diver II - Mitchell
103 - Pebble Beach - The Great Shot - T&E Soft
104 - Pirates - NIX
105 - Poke Champ - DGRM
106 - Pretty Soldier Sailor Moon - Gazelle
107 - Psychic Force
108 - Pulstar - Aicom
109 - Pururun - Metro
110 - Puzzle & Action_ Sando-R
111 - Puzzle Bobble 2
112 - Puzzle De Pon!
113 - Puzzli - Metro
114 - Quiz Do Re Mi Fa Grand Prix 2 - Shin-Kyoku Nyuukadayo
115 - Quiz King of Fighters - Saurus
116 - Quiz Salibtamjeong - The Last Count Down - Viccom
117 - Quiz Tonosama no Yabou 2_ Zenkoku-ban
118 - Quizard - TAB Austria
119 - Quizard 2 - Tab Austria
120 - R-Shark - Dooyong
121 - Rave Racer
122 - Real Bout Fatal Fury
123 - Samurai Shodown III
124 - Savage Reign
125 Rally Championship
126 - Shanghai - The Great Wall _ Shanghai Triple Threat
127 - Silver Millennium - Para
128 - Sky Target
129 - Slip Stream
130 - Sokonuke Taisen Game
131 - Sotsugyo Shousho - Mitchell
132 - Soul Edge
133 - Space Invaders '95_ The Attack Of Lunar Loonies
134 - Speed Racer
135 - Stakes Winner - Saurus
136 - Street Fighter Alpha_ Warriors' Dreams
137 - Street Fighter_ The Movie
138 - Strikers 1945 - Psikyo
139 - Super Football Champ
140 - Super Sidekicks 3 - The Next Glory
141 - Super World Stadium '95
142 - Susume! Mile Smile - Fuuki
143 - Table Tennis Champions - Gamart
144 - Target Ball - Yun Sung
145 - Tekken 2
146 - Tetris Plus
147 - Time Crisis
148 - Tokimeki Memorial Taisen Puzzle-dama
149 - Touch & Go
150 - Twin Action - Afega
151 - Twin Adventure
152 - Twin Bee Yahhoo!
153 - Twin Brats - Elettronica Video-Games
154 - Twin Cobra II
155 - Twin Qix
156 - Ultra X Weapons
157 - Varia Metal - Excellent System
158 - Viper Phase 1 - Seibu Kaihatsu
159 - Virtua Cop 2
160 - Virtua Fighter Remix
161 - Voltage Fighter - Gowcaizer
162 - War Gods
163 - Wonder League Star - Sok-Magicball Fighting - Mijin
164 - World Beach Volley - Playmark
165 - World Class Bowling
166 - World Cup Volley '95
167 - World Heroes Perfect - ADK
168 - World Rally 2_ Twin Racing
169 - WWF_ Wrestlemania
170 - X-Day 2
171 - Xevious 3D_G
172 - Zip & Zap
173 - Zombie Raid
Gals Panic 3... yes... I saw that
Thanks for the Steamkey, Gary -- it's 2020's OUT OF SPACE from Behold Studios. A multiplayer space station sim with an interesting sense of humor, I'm diggin it!
Awesome video, thanks so much for this video catalog of great games! We now get to a period where a lot of the games look like Saturn or PS1 games, and of course some of them were indeed ported over there (including some real favorites: especially shooters, fighters, light-gun games). But there are plenty of surprises:
- Biomechanical Toy, Desert War, MS Gundam Final Shooting, and Pirates look amazing -- I wanna play them right now!
- Manx TT & Sky Target both had so-so home conversions on Saturn, but both look sweet in the arcade.
- I never played Avengers in Galactic Storm, looks fun! Must have been one of Data East's last fighting games, and you would have thought it would have a home conversion with the Marvel connection ... but it had none until the currently-in-production Arcade 1UP 4-player X-Men cabinet (maybe the best from 1UP?!)
- Surprised that Data East would release Backfire! and Kaneko would release Mille Miglia, old school isometric racers at such a late date and with so much more sophisticated racing game competition from Namco & Sega. At least Gaelco with World Rally 2 had a H2H gameplay mode, presumably on two screens. Speaking of the competition, it looks like several of Namco & Sega's awesome racing games never got home conversions even back then. They must have ben concerned about saturating the market?
- Quite a few quiz games & puzzle-stacking games, just like on consoles of the time. I played hundreds of hours of Puzzle Bobble 2 back in the 90s, and so did my girlfriend at the time, so that's probably my most played/worn PS1 disc. Also a burst of games with Qix gameplay to uncover the pretty girl, which didn't make it home so often ... All three genres must have been pretty cheap to program, and reliable sources of income in arcades/bars.
- Dragon Might is a cool looking fighter from Konami, reminiscent of their classic beatemups in its look.
- Seeing Maddoman/Mudman in World Heroes Perfect gives me flashbacks -- that guy was so difficult to beat, ugh!
- I don't know about you, but the prospect of playing Othello Derby against a virtual chimp woud certainly have brought me into the arcade quite often in 1995.
I found that 1995 was the year of Namco. To be blunt, I feel they dominated. So many heavy hitters like Soul Edge, Tekken, Ace Combat - franchises that are around even today - that were technologically ahead of everyone else.
Capcom was still pumping out fighters - although highly polished (except maybe Street Fighter: The Movie), was looking quite technologically out of date. Even Sega who, just a few years earlier was blazing trails with 3 D technology seemed to have fallen a bit behind.
An interesting discovery - as you mentioned - that some pretty cool racers from Sega and Namco didn't make it home! Cool Riders, Cyber Cycles, Rave Racer...
Otherwise this was pretty much the year of the 1v1 fighting game! Sure there were a couple of interesting variants like Metamoqester - and I had no idea that Jackie Chan was digitized into a game - but this was, I think, a saturation point. The sad part is that most of them are competent and playable (compared to the experimental fighters from previous years) - but with titles like Voltage Fighter, Dragon Might, World Heroes etc. the market was just overloaded. If I had walked into an arcade and seen 2 dozen different fighting games, I probably would have just ignored them all and gone to play Sky Target...
Definitely interesting that old school isometric racers were getting pumped out. Indeed it's hard to imagine back then anyone choosing to play one of those over their more hi-tech competition. BUT interestingly, when assembling this video - I actually spent more time with Kaneko's entry than Sega/Namcos...
Oh and of course - we have to acknowledge the smut. Nothing like a little bit of nudity to entice a few quarters from a player ...
And chimps + othello + derby racing = major WTF Japan?
Some of these are 1996 I think, like Virtual On and KI2
Nice video, nice channel, and I love the decision of remove all mahjong/gambling games, subscribed.
Gracias Gary por otro excelente video!!! 🎮
Lol holy shit that took me by surprise 2:10 that's definitely what I thought it was.
Do you think the devs of Qix would had any idea there would be so many adult-oriented ripoffs of the game? lol
33:15 Time 71 & 61
Thanks dude! Amazing video.
Great vid. There's 40 I wanna try, 20 I knew of being arcade games and 2 I have played. I did order War Gods on N64 a bit ago and it should come in some time soon. Good choices of fighter in the fighting games, Shaia ands Karin in Gowcaizer, Mai Shiranui in KOF, The ones people care about
12:37 Honey Dolls, 13:01 Hot Pinball, 18:50 New Fantasia, 34:15 Zip & Zap
A true man of culture right there
I configured Zombie Raid with Sinden lightgun last night. Just a tip... if you use FinalBurn Neo core you can use run-ahead lag reduction, it makes a difference in rail shooters. I chopped out 3 frames of lag.
Did anybody notice that the jet in the beginning is the f-22? And its called "air combat 22"?
35 is Dragoon Might (double "o")
Her zamanki gibi yine kapsamlı bir çalışma olmuş. İyi ve güzel bir video. Bu çalışmaların için teşekkürler. Fakat devamını beklediğimi bilmelisin. : ) Çünkü böylesine güzel işlere bizi alıştırdın.
Teşekkürler! Beğendiğine sevindim. Devam filmi çok yakında...
I from 1995
24:50 🔝🔝🔝
Wonderful 😍
32:32 Pitcher
31:39 🔝🔝🔝
16:24 🔝🔝🔝
Virtua Fighter Remix is a console game though. A lot of these are actually....
Check your facts. Read: virtuafighter.fandom.com/wiki/Virtua_Fighter_Remix
"It also had an arcade release on the ST-V (an arcade platform based on the Sega Saturn)"
@@GaryRetroGamer i stand corrected!
Do anyone here know the name of old ninja game say hopa when do magic as he can become twice the game look such shinobi plzzz
2:10 what is up there??
walaupun jadul tetep aja keren😃
Forgot Mortal Kombat 3 and Ultimate Mortal Kombat 3
They are both in the 1994 video -- ruclips.net/video/DMss6qwcLss/видео.html
WIkipedia lists them as being released in 1995 - but MAME lists them as a 1994 release. These videos used the MAME dates.
@@GaryRetroGamer Well the MAME dates are incorrect.
@@bryansteele832 Not that I'm doubting you (I'm not) - but do you have any factual evidence to back that up?
@@GaryRetroGamer Other than physically being at the arcade in my mall when it came out in April of 1995...no. Then 6 months later it came out on SNES and Ultimate MK3 was released in arcades. I was like well..WTF? I felt cheated. So yeah. All I can say was "I was there."
@@bryansteele832 Ohhh, man - I also remember being annoyed about that UlimateMK3 release so close to the original release!
Having said that, it may have been released to your local arcade in 1995 - but that doesn't mean it couldn't have released earlier in other markets/arcades - so, I'm going to assume that MAME is still correct. If you can find something that proves otherwise though - please let me know and I'll post an errata!
🎃🦇🎃🦇🎃🖤
Hahaaa, Gaaryyy