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All Japan Pro Wrestling 2: 3-4 Budokan [1995] (SNES) All Japan Pro Wrestling featuring Virtua [1997] (Saturn) King's Soul: All Japan Pro Wrestling [1999] (PlayStation) Giant Gram: All Japan Pro Wrestling 2 [1999] (Dreamcast) Giant Gram 2000: All Japan Pro Wrestling 3 [2000] (Dreamcast) Virtual Pro Wrestling 2 [2000] (Nintendo 64)
Although based on professional wrestling, WWF WrestleMania ' s digitized graphics and fast-paced gameplay make it more of a fighting game than a sports/wrestling game inspired by Midway's popular Mortal Kombat series. [1] What separates this game from previous and future WWF/WWE video games is its over-the-top and very cartoonish attacks.
Professional wrestling games are video games, card games or other forms of interactive entertainment which simulate professional wrestling matches. ...
Gameplay screenshot showcasing a match with Bomberder facing off against The Gandhara. Players can play as one of 10 fictional professional wrestlers to fight for the SWF championship title. Along with the standard wrestling match, fights locations include venues such as car parks and factories (turning it into a hardcore wrestling match, with ...
Gameplay modes consist of one-on-one, tag team, and four-on-four Survivor Series elimination matches. The Genesis version also contains a WWF Championship mode where the player selects one wrestler and must defeat the rest in a series of one-on-one matches to be crowned WWF Champion.
Starting with the release of WWE SmackDown! vs. Raw, online gameplay was made available through PlayStation 2's Sony Network Adapter. Online gameplay was kept at a minimum, as online players only had two game modes to compete in: one-on-one and a strip match, in which a player competes as any female wrestler in WWE and strips the opposition of ...
It is the sequel to WWF SmackDown!, and the second game in the SmackDown series, itself based on the World Wrestling Federation (WWF, now WWE) professional wrestling promotion. Know Your Role achieved commercial success, becoming the best-selling combat sports game on a single format (PlayStation) with 3.2 million units sold. [3]
Mat Mania, [5] known in Japan as Exciting Hour: The ProWrestling Network [a] or simply Exciting Hour, [b] is a Japanese wrestling arcade video game developed by Technōs Japan and published by Taito in 1985. It is a spiritual successor to the 1983 arcade game Tag-Team Wrestling, also developed by Technōs Japan, but published by Data East.