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A Game Boy Color RPG titled Bomberman B-Daman Bakugaiden: The Road to Victory (ボンバーマンビーダマン爆外伝 ビクトリーへのみち, Bombāman Bī-Daman Bakugaiden: Bikutorī he no Michi, lit. "Bomberman Marbleman Explosive Side Story: The Road to Victory") was created by Media Factory on January 29, 1999. [1]
Re-released on MSX in 1986 (as Bomberman Special) and on Game Boy Advance and N-Gage in 2004. Bomberman: 1990 1991: TurboGrafx-16/PC Engine, X68000, Amiga, MS-DOS, Atari ST: Released as Bomberman for the TG-16/PC Engine release, which was the first Bomberman release to support five players; first Bomberman game for the IBM-PC. Bomberman II ...
Bomberman (ボンバーマン, Bonbāman, also briefly known as Dyna Blaster in Europe [1]) is a video game franchise created by Shinichi Nakamoto and Shigeki Fujiwara, originally developed by Hudson Soft and currently owned by Konami.
Another video game, simply titled Bomberman Jetters, was created by Hudson Soft and released for the PlayStation 2 and GameCube in Japan on December 19, 2002. Majesco Entertainment released the GameCube version in North America on March 10, 2004.
Bomber Man World [a] is a 1992 video game released by Irem under license from Hudson Soft for arcades. [2] [3] It is part of the Bomberman series.It was the second Bomberman game to be released for arcades, preceded by Bomberman (1991), which was also released by Irem.
Bomberman 64 (1997 video game) Bomberman 64 (2001 video game) Bomberman 64: The Second Attack! Bomberman '93; Bomberman '94; A. Bomberman: Act Zero; Atomic Bomberman;
Bomberman GB is a sub-series of video games in Hudson Soft's Bomberman series released for the Game Boy.The first entry was Bomberman GB, released as Wario Blast: Featuring Bomberman! in North America and Europe, later succeeded by Bomberman GB 2, under the name Bomberman GB internationally, and Bomberman GB 3, which was only released in Japan.
Bomberman [a] is a maze video game developed and published by Hudson Soft.The original home computer game Bomber Man [b] was released in July 1983 for the NEC PC-8801, NEC PC-6001 mkII, Fujitsu FM-7, Sharp MZ-700, Sharp MZ-2000, Sharp X1 and MSX in Japan, and a graphically modified version for the MSX and ZX Spectrum in Europe as Eric and the Floaters.