Super Final Match Tennis (Japan) [JP]

Super Final Match Tennis is a multiplayer tennis game for the Super Famicom. It features 28 different tennis professionals (fourteen male, fourteen female) and can support up to four players with the multi-tap peripheral. Various modes, such as exhibition and tournament, are available to play through. Super Final Match Tennis is a sequel to the … Read more

Super Famista 5 (Japan) [JP]

Super Famista 5 is the fourteenth game in Namco’s Famista (short for Family Stadium) series of baseball sims and the final to be released for the Super Famicom. Like its predecessors, it uses super-deformed versions of athletes and features real teams from the Nippon Professional Baseball League. Future entries would move to the N64 briefly … Read more

Super Famista 4 (Japan) (Rev 1) [JP]

Super Famista 4 is a baseball game for the Super Famicom. It is the fourth game for the system, and the thirteenth game in the series overall. As with its forebears, the game features the real teams of the Nippon Professional Baseball league and a super-deformed style for its athletes. The game also features in-game … Read more

Super Famista 3 (Japan) [JP]

Super Famista 3 is the third of five Super Famicom games in Namco’s Famista (short for Family Stadium) series of baseball sims. It followed Famista ’94, the final NES Famista game, which was released in December 1993. Like previous Famista games, the game has the license to use the Nippon Professional Baseball license, Japan’s analog … Read more

Super Famista 2 (Japan) [JP]

Super Famista 2 is the sequel to Super Famista/Super Batter Up and part of the larger Famista (Family Stadium) series of baseball sims from Namco. Like its precursor, it has both an exhibition mode and a league mode, as well as options to customize a team. As with every Famista game prior, the athletes are … Read more

Super Famista (Japan) [JP]

Super Batter Up is a baseball game with both a 1 and 2 player mode plus a league mode. The game carries the MLBPA license, but not an MLB license, so it only features all the players from the 1991 season playing for a team in a city that they really play for. Players get … Read more

Super Family Tennis (Japan) [JP]

The controls of Smash Tennis work similar to other tennis games and especially Namco’s previous tennis game World Court Tennis: the player moves the athlete over the court and presses buttons with the correct timing in order to win the match. This time there is no story mode, but a tournament mode instead. Here the … Read more

Super Family Circuit (Japan) [JP]

A variable racing game focused on open-wheel/Formula One racing using a top-down perspective. There’s rally and stock cars available as well an the game includes numerous pieces of comic art that displays various scenes of the racing world.

Super F1 Circus Limited (Japan) [JP]

Super F1 Circus Limited is largely identical to Cream’s earlier Super Famicom racing game Super F1 Circus, however it was shortly after the release of that game that Cream was given permission by FOCA (Formula One Constructors’ Union, an association of car manufacturers for Formula One) to use actual driver and team names for their … Read more

Super F1 Circus Gaiden (Japan) [JP]

Super F1 Circus Gaiden is a “behind the exhaust” car racing game from Cream and Nichibutsu and the fifth and final Super Famicom game in the F1 Circus series, as well as the final game in that franchise overall. The player competes for a chance to enter Formula 1 tournaments, but in the single-player mode … Read more