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  2. WWF SmackDown! 2: Know Your Role - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/WWF_SmackDown!_2:_Know...

    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]

  3. List of professional wrestling video games - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_professional...

    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)

  4. WWF Superstars - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/WWF_Superstars

    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.

  5. List of WWE video games - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_WWE_video_games

    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.

  6. WWE 2K23 - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/WWE_2K23

    WWE 2K23 is a 2023 professional wrestling sports video game developed by Visual Concepts and published by 2K. [1] It is the twenty-third overall installment of the video game series based on WWE, the ninth game under the WWE 2K banner, and the successor to WWE 2K22.

  7. Sydney 2000 (video game) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sydney_2000_(video_game)

    It's somewhat amusing to relive childhood memories of the local arcade, but the game's lack of depth and repetitive game mechanics grow old quickly." [30] Cheat Monkey of GamePro said of the PlayStation version, "If you're hankering for some Olympic competition and want to go beyond the standard track and field events, Sydney 2000 is a decent ...

  8. WWF WrestleMania X8 (video game) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/WWF_WrestleMania_X8_(video...

    WrestleMania X8 was Yuke's first WWE game on a Nintendo platform, replacing AKI Corporation as the developer for these systems; some former AKI developers were hired by Yuke's to develop a game with gameplay style closer to their titles rather than Yuke's own SmackDown series on PlayStation, while taking advantage of GameCube's graphical capabilities compared to Nintendo 64.

  9. The Main Event (video game) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Main_Event_(video_game)

    The game is located at the world's largest arcade museum at Funspot in Weirs Beach (Laconia, New Hampshire). In December 2010, The Main Event was re-released on Microsoft's Game Room service for its Xbox 360 video game system as part of Game Pack 013. [7] The game's ROMs have been dumped and are supported in MAME.