Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
Arcade Archives [a] is a series of emulated arcade games from the late 1970s, 1980s, 1990s, and early 2000s for PlayStation 4, Xbox One, Microsoft Windows, and Nintendo Switch, published by Hamster Corporation.
Galaga [a] is a 1981 fixed shooter video game developed and published by Namco for arcades. In North America, it was released by Midway Manufacturing . It is the sequel to Galaxian (1979), Namco's first major video game hit in arcades.
Namco Classic Collection Vol. 1 [a] is a 1995 arcade game compilation developed and published by Namco.It includes three of the company's most well-known games from the early 1980s — Galaga (1981), Xevious (1983), and Mappy (1983) — alongside brand-new "Arrangement" remakes of these games that have updated gameplay, visuals, and sounds.
Galaga: Destination Earth, known in the Game Boy Color version as Galaga, is a 2000 3D video game, an update to the popular Golden Age arcade game, Galaga.It was developed by King of the Jungle and published by Hasbro Interactive and Majesco Entertainment for Microsoft Windows, PlayStation, and Game Boy Color.
Arcade Classics is a video game compilation released on CD-i containing ports of three Namco arcade games.The compilation was released in Europe but not in North America.. It contains the games Galaxian (1979), Ms. Pac-Man (1981), and Galaga (1981).
Specifically, there are two types of HuCard formats (the standard HuCards that comprised the majority of the PC Engine's library and a few games that are playable only on the PC Engine SuperGrafx) and three types of CD-ROM formats (CD-ROM², Super CD-ROM², and Arcade CD-ROM², each requiring the console to be equipped with a CD drive and the ...
Galaga: Destination Earth: No — Pipe Dream Interactive: Hasbro Interactive: September 25, 2000 (NA) Game Boy Wars 2: Yes — Hudson Soft: Hudson Soft November 20, 1998 (JP) Game Boy Wars 3: No — Hudson Soft: Hudson Soft August 30, 2001 (JP) Game Conveni 21: Yes — Starfish: May 19, 2000 (JP)
Galaga '88: Namco System 1: December 1987: Yes Yes No Remake of Galaga. Licensed to Atari Games for U.S. Distribution. PC Engine: July 15, 1988: Yes No No Game Gear: October 25, 1991: Yes No Yes Released as Galaga '91. Final Lap: Namco System 2: December 1987: Yes Yes No First Namco game to allow multiple cabinets to be linked together.