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  2. GTI Club: Rally Côte d'Azur - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/GTI_Club:_Rally_Côte_d'Azur

    GTI Club: Rally Côte d'Azur is a game that gives players a choice of eight cars including the VW Golf GTI, Renault Le Car, and Mini Cooper, and the course winds through a European city. [3] It is a street racing game with non-linear maps, allowing players to take shortcuts through alternative routes such as tunnels and back alleys.

  3. Dragoon Might - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dragoon_Might

    Dragoon Might features two distinct game modes. A single match mode in which the player must defeat their opponents in round-based matches, and a team match mode similar to The King of Fighters series in which two teams of three members must battle each other until the members of one team are all defeated.

  4. Bemani - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bemani

    Bemani (ビーマニ, Bīmani, / b iː ˈ m ɑː n i /), stylized as BEMANI, is Konami's music video game division. Originally named the Games & Music Division (G.M.D.), it changed its name in honor of its first and most successful game, Beatmania, and expanded into other music-based games, most notably rhythm games such as Dance Dance Revolution, GuitarFreaks, and DrumMania.

  5. e-Amusement - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/E-Amusement

    e-Amusement, stylized as e-amusement, is an online service operated by Konami, used primarily for online functionality on its arcade video games. [1] The system is used primarily to save progress and unlockable content between games, [2] participate in internet high score lists, access other exclusive features depending on the game, and access the Paseli digital currency service.

  6. WEC Le Mans - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/WEC_Le_Mans

    WEC Le Mans deluxe arcade unit. Konami released three different video game arcade cabinet versions of the video arcade game, an upright machine, a 'mini' spin where the driver sat in a sit-down cockpit, and the 'big' spin version, the deluxe arcade version that would actually spin the gamer around a 360° spinning base, turning left or right depending on the corner.

  7. Knightmare (1986 video game) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Knightmare_(1986_video_game)

    Knightmare [a] is a 1986 vertically scrolling shooter video game developed and published by Konami for the MSX home computer. It was included in compilations for the MSX, PlayStation and Sega Saturn, followed by a port for mobile phones, and digital re-releases for the Virtual Console and Microsoft Windows.

  8. Road Rage (1995 video game) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Road_Rage_(1995_video_game)

    The game contains references to a large number of other Konami games (Gradius, Parodius, Metal Gear, Snatcher, Frogger, etc.). The races themselves take place in the city of Neo Kobe (known from Konami's Snatcher), inspired by the movie Blade Runner. [8] The gameplay is similar to the better-known futuristic racing series Wipeout.

  9. Time Pilot '84 - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Time_Pilot_'84

    Time Pilot '84: Further Into Unknown World is a scrolling multidirectional shooter released in arcades in 1984 by Konami.The different time periods of 1982's Time Pilot are replaced by a top-down view of a science fiction landscape that varies in color and type of enemies. [1]