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Video games featuring professional wrestling promotion New Japan Pro-Wrestling: New Japan Pro-Wrestling: The Three Musketeers [1991] (Game Boy) New Japan Pro-Wrestling: Fantastic Story in Tokyo Dome [1993] (SNES) New Japan Pro-Wrestling '94 [1994] (SNES) New Japan Pro-Wrestling '94: Battlefield in Tokyo Dome [1994] (TurboGrafx-CD, Super Famicom)
WWF Raw (1994) was released in 1994 for Super NES, 32X, Mega Drive/Genesis, and Game Boy. WWF In Your House was released in 1996 for the PlayStation, Sega Saturn, and MS-DOS. WWF War Zone was released in 1998 for PlayStation, Nintendo 64, and Game Boy. WWF WrestleMania 2000 (video game) was released in 1999 for Nintendo 64.
WWF Superstars [a] is a wrestling video game manufactured by Technōs Japan and released for arcades in 1989. It is the first WWF arcade game to be released. A series of unrelated games with the same title were released by LJN for the original Game Boy. Technōs followed the game with the release of WWF WrestleFest in 1991.
WWF Superstars 2 features a more limited moveset than its predecessor. All wrestlers share the same moveset with no signature moves. Moves are limited to strikes (punching and kicking), grapples (headbutt, suplex, and bodyslam), ground attacks (stomp and elbow drop), Irish whip moves (clothesline and dropkick), and an aerial attack (flying elbow drop).
Freestyle wrestling is a style of wrestling.It is one of two styles of wrestling contested in the Olympic Games, along with Greco-Roman. High school wrestling and men's collegiate wrestling in the United States are conducted under different rules and termed scholastic and collegiate wrestling.
WWF WrestleFest [a] [1] is a professional wrestling video game developed and released by Technōs Japan for arcades in 1991, featuring stars of the World Wrestling Federation (WWF). The game was distributed by Technōs in Japan and North America, and by Tecmo in Japan, [1] Europe and Australasia.