|
F-1
Genre: Course
F-1 is a 1976 electro-mechanical racing arcade game developed and published by Namco. It was distributed by Atari, Inc. in the United States. The player uses a steering wheel to control a Formula One racer, which must avoid collision with other vehicles. The game uses a miniature diorama with small, plastic cars to represent the player's car and opponents on a physical, rotating track, while also featuring a projector system and lighting tricks to create the illusion of racing.
The game was desi…
|
|
Final Blow
Genre: Sport
Publishers: Taito
Final Blow est un jeu vidéo de boxe développé et commercialisé par Taito en 1988 sur borne d'arcade. Le jeu a été adapté sur Amiga, Atari ST, Commodore 64, FM Towns et Mega Drive. Sega a rebaptisé la version Mega Drive occidentale James « Buster » Douglas Knockout Boxing après la victoire surprise de Douglas contre Mike Tyson en 1990.
|
|
Forgotten Worlds
Genre: Tir
Publishers: CapcomSega,U.S. Gold,NEC Avenue
Forgotten Worlds (ロストワールド, Lost Worlds) est un jeu vidéo de shoot 'em up développé par Capcom, sorti en 1988. C'est le premier jeu commercialisé sur système d'arcade CP System,.
|
|
Fonz
Genre: Course
Publishers: Sega
Fonz is a 1976 arcade racing video game developed by Sega and published by Sega-Gremlin. The game was based on the 1970s hit TV show Happy Days and the slogan was "TV's hottest name, Your hottest game." The game itself was simply a rebranded variant of Sega's earlier 1976 game Moto-Cross, also known as Man T.T. (released August 1976), in a customized arcade cabinet. In turn, Moto-Cross and Man T.T. were motorbike variants of Road Race, a car driving game released in February 1976. Sega was allow…
|
|
F355 Challenge
Genre: Course, Simulation
Publishers: Sega,Acclaim,Sony
F355 Challenge est un jeu vidéo de course réalisé par le studio Sega-AM2, sous la direction de Yū Suzuki, et commercialisé par Sega en 1999 sur borne d'arcade et plus tard Dreamcast. Le joueur y pilote la célèbre Ferrari F355.
|
|
Funky Head Boxers
Genre: Action, Combat, Sport
Publishers: Sega,Yoshimoto Kogyo
Funky Head Boxers is a video game developed and published by Sega for the arcade and Sega Saturn.
|
|
Fighting Layer
Genre: Action, Combat
Publishers: Namco
Fighting Layer (ファイティングレイヤー, Faitingu Reiyā) is a 3D fighting game developed by Arika and published by Namco. It released exclusively in Japan in December 1998 and has not been released overseas, ported to home consoles, or ported to PC. A spiritual sequel, Fighting EX Layer, was released in 2018.
|
|
Fantasy Zone
Genre: Tir
Fantasy Zone (ファンタジーゾーン) est un jeu vidéo de type shoot 'em up en scrolling horizontal, développé et édité par Sega en 1986 sur borne d'arcade. Il est par la suite porté sur Game Gear, Master System, MSX, Nintendo Entertainment System, PC-Engine et Sharp X68000.
Troisième volume de la collection rétro Sega Ages, ce jeu a été réédité sur PlayStation 2 sous le titre Sega Classics Collection et ses niveaux colorés ont bénéficié d'améliorations en 3D.
|
|
Four Trax
Genre: Course
Four Trax is a 1989 racing arcade game developed and published by Namco. It was released in North America by Atari Games, and was ported to the Sega Genesis in 1991 as Quad Challenge. Players take control of four quad bikes (red for Player 1, white for Player 2, yellow for Player 3, and green for Player 4), which are competing in an "off-road" race - and they all have a preset amount of time in which to complete a full lap of the track, but for each lap of the track that is successfully complete…
|
|
Fire Truck
Genre: Course
Publishers: Atari,Inc.
Fire Truck is a black-and-white 1978 arcade game developed and published by Atari, Inc.. According to GamesRadar, it was the earliest video game with cooperative gameplay where two players are forced to work together. A single-player version was released as Smokey Joe. It is internally identical to Fire Truck.Fire Truck is built on the technology created for Atari's Super Bug released the previous year. Both games were programmed by Howard Delman.
|
|
Full Throttle
Genre: Course
Full Throttle, also known as Top Speed (for USA and the rest of the world), is a one-player racing arcade game developed by Taito Corporation in 1987. It is very similar in style to the Out Run games in that it features a fast, red car hurtling through the U.S. countryside. The key difference in gameplay is the addition of a nitro boost button.
|
|
Flying Shark
Genre: Tir
Flying Shark is a 1987 vertically scrolling shooter arcade video game originally developed by Toaplan and published by Taito in Japan, Romstar in North America and Electrocoin in Europe. Controlling the titular biplane, the players must fight endless waves of military vehicles while avoiding collision with their projectiles and other obstacles. The plane has a powerful bomb at its disposal that can clear the screen of enemies when fired. It was the third shoot 'em up game from Toaplan, and their…
|
|
Fighting Vipers
Genre: Action, Combat
Publishers: Sega
Fighting Vipers (ファイティングバイパーズ Faitingu Vaipāzu) est un jeu vidéo de combat 3D sorti en 1995 sur arcade (Model 2) puis porté sur Saturn l'année suivante. Le jeu a été développé par Sega-AM2 puis édité par Sega.
Il a été réédité sur PlayStation 2 sous le titre Sega Ages 2500 Series Vol. 19: Fighting Vipers.
Le jeu connait une suite, Fighting Vipers 2, sortie en 1998 sur arcade (Model 3) et portée en 2001 sur Dreamcast.
|
|
Face Off
Genre: Sport
Publishers: Namco
Face Off is a hockey arcade game developed and released by Namco for Japan only in 1988. Up to four players control players from one of eight hockey teams against each other, the objective being to score the most points before the timer ends. Similar to Namco's own Final Lap, multiple cabinets can be linked together to enable multiplayer play. It ran on the Namco System 1 arcade board. Face Off received a favorable critical reception for its visuals and gameplay. A digital re-release for the Wii…
|
|
Fast Draw Showdown
Genre: Tir
Publishers: American Laser Games,Digital Leisure
Fast Draw Showdown is a live-action laserdisc video game, released by American Laser Games in 1994 (see 1994 in video gaming) for a limited number of platforms. As one of the last live-action rail shooters released by the company, which began the series with Mad Dog McCree, it is also arguably the shortest. The game was filmed entirely in at the Old Tucson Studios near Tucson, Arizona, with sets used for several notable films belonging to the Western genre.
Global VR re-released the arcade game …
|
|
Fatal Fury: Wild Ambition
Genre: Action, Combat
Publishers: SNK
Fatal Fury: Wild Ambition (餓狼伝説 ワイルドアンビション) est un jeu vidéo de combat en 3D développé et édité par SNK sur Hyper Neo-Geo 64 et PlayStation en 1998. C'est le huitième épisode de la série Fatal Fury.
|
|
Finest Hour
Genre: Action
Publishers: Namco
Finest Hour (ファイネストアワー, Fainesuto Awā) is a 1989 run and gun arcade game developed and published in Japan by Namco. It was later re-released on the Wii Virtual Console on August 25, 2009.
|
|
FixEight
Genre: Action
Publishers: Toaplan
FixEight is a run and gun arcade video game developed and published by Toaplan on July 1992. The spiritual successor to 1990's Out Zone, it is notable for being one of the few titles by Toaplan that has not received any official port to home consoles as of date. Set in a future where an alien race known as the Gozzu from the fictional planet Fortuna invaded the universe, players are tasked by the Galactic Federation government with an extermination mission against the invaders by assuming the ro…
|
|
Final Lap 3
Genre: Course
Publishers: Namco
Final Lap 3 (ファイナルラップ3, Fainaru Rappu Tsurī), as the name suggests, is the third title in the Final Lap series, released worldwide by Namco in 1992; like its precursors (as well as Four Trax, and Suzuka 8 Hours), it runs on Namco System 2 hardware, and allows up to eight players to play simultaneously when four two-player cabinets are linked together. It features four new tracks set in England, France, San Marino, and Spain - and for the third time, the players must take control of either the Wi…
|
|
Final Lap 2
Genre: Course
Publishers: Namco
Final Lap 2 (ファイナルラップ2, Fainaru Rappu Tsū) is a sequel to Final Lap (released by Namco in 1990); it runs on Namco System 2 hardware, and much like the original title (and Four Trax), it allows up to eight players to play simultaneously when four two-player sit-down cabinets are connected together, but this one features four different tracks which are set in the game's home country of Japan (the Suzuka Circuit from the original), Italy, Monaco, and the United States (which resembles the Test trac…
|