List of Kemco games

Last updated

This is a list of Kemco games. Of note, the video games in North America prior to 1992 were not published by Kemco themselves, but instead by their distributor Seika Corporation of Torrance, California, who used the label Kemco * Seika to market Kemco's titles in the region.

Contents

Console-based games

Original games

TitleConsolesRelease dateJPNAPALNotes
Space Hunter NES September 25, 1986YesNoNo
Toki no Tabibito -Time Stranger- NES December 26, 1986YesNoNo
Indora no Hikari NES October 20, 1987YesNoNo
Desert Commander NES April 28, 1988YesYesNoBased on events of World War II.
Sanada Ten Braves NES June 27, 1988YesNoNoBased on the Sanada Ten Braves Ninja group.
Ghost Lion NES July 14, 1989YesYesNo
The Sword of Hope Game Boy December 28, 1989YesYesYes
Nekojara Monogatari Game Boy December 14, 1990YesNoNo
Top Gear SNES March 27, 1992YesYesYesDeveloped by Gremlin Graphics.
The Sword of Hope II Game Boy September 4, 1992YesYesNo
Kid Klown in Night Mayor World NES April 1, 1993NoYesNoReskin of Mickey Mouse III: Yume Fuusen.
X-Zone SNES November 1992YesYesYes
Dr. Franken Game Boy December 1992NoYesNoDeveloped by Motivetime.
Top Gear 2 SNES August 8, 1993YesYesYesDeveloped by Gremlin Graphics.
Kid Klown in Crazy Chase SNES September 10, 1994YesYesYes
Game Boy Advance October 21, 2002NoYesYes
Top Gear 3000 SNES February 1995YesYesNoDeveloped by Gremlin Graphics.
Prehistorik Man SNES June 23, 1995YesNoNoDeveloped by Titus France.
Virtual League Baseball Virtual Boy August 11, 1995YesYesNo
Kid Klown in Crazy Chase 2: Love Love Hani Soudatsusen PlayStation December 6, 1996YesNoNo
Soreyuke!! Kid Game Boy July 18, 1997YesNoNo
The Bombing Islands PlayStation July 18, 1997YesYesYes
Nintendo 64 April 30, 1999NoYesYesDeveloped by Realtime Associates.
Top Gear Rally Nintendo 64 October 1997YesNoYesDeveloped by Boss Game Studios.
Game Boy Color March 25, 1999YesNoYesDeveloped by Vision Works.
Game Boy Advance July 25, 2003YesNoYesDeveloped by Tantalus Interactive.
Knife Edge: Nose Gunner Nintendo 64 November 10, 1998YesYesYes
Twisted Edge Extreme Snowboarding Nintendo 64 November 10, 1998YesNoYesDeveloped by Boss Game Studios.
Top Gear Overdrive Nintendo 64 November 23, 1998YesYesYes
Deja Vu I and II Game Boy Color October 15, 1999YesNoYesDeveloped by Infinite Ventures.
Top Gear Rally 2 Nintendo 64 December 3, 1999YesYesYes
Game Boy Color December 17, 1999YesNoYes
Top Gear Pocket 2 Game Boy Color December 17, 1999YesNoYes
Top Gear Hyper Bike Nintendo 64 March 17, 2000YesYesYesDeveloped by Snowblind Studios.
Top Gear: Dare Devil PlayStation 2 December 19, 2000YesYesNoDeveloped by Papaya Studio.
Top Gear GT Championship Game Boy Advance March 21, 2001YesYesYes
Mech Platoon Game Boy Advance November 28, 2001YesYesYes
Egg Mania: Eggstreme Madness GameCube September 11, 2002YesYesYesDeveloped by HotGen.
Xbox September 11, 2002YesYesYes
PlayStation 2 September 12, 2002YesYesYes
Game Boy Advance September 16, 2002YesYesYes
GET! Boku no Mushitsu Kamaete Game Boy Advance July 11, 2003YesNoNoDeveloped by Wizard.
Rogue Ops Xbox October 28, 2003YesYesYesDeveloped by Bits Studios.
PlayStation 2 October 29, 2003YesYesYes
GameCube October 29, 2003YesYesYes
Yager Xbox September 28, 2004NoYesNoDeveloped by Yager Development.

Ports, localizations, and licensed games

TitleConsolesRelease dateJPNAPALNotes
Dough Boy NES December 11, 1985YesNoNoPort of the Commodore 64 game by Synapse Software.
Spy vs. Spy NES April 26, 1986YesNoNoPort of the game by First Star Software. Based on Spy vs. Spy.
Game Boy Color July 23, 1999YesNoYes
Electrician NES December 26, 1986YesNoNoPort of the Atari 8-bit game by Synapse Software.
Nankoku Shirei!! Spy vs. Spy NES March 27, 1987YesNoNoBased on Spy vs. Spy.
Superman NES December 22, 1987YesYesNoBased on the first two Superman films.
Donald Duck/Snoopy's Silly Sports Spectacular NES September 22, 1988YesYesYesUses characters from Disney productions and the Peanuts comics.
Déjà Vu NES November 22, 1988YesYesNoPort of the game by ICOM Simulations.
Legend of the Galactic Heroes NES December 21, 1988YesNoNoBased on the novels by Yoshiki Tanaka.
Roger Rabbit/Mickey Mouse/The Bugs Bunny Crazy Castle FDS February 16, 1989YesNoNoUses characters from Who Framed Roger Rabbit , other Disney productions, and Looney Tunes .
Game Boy May 5, 1989YesYesNo
NES August 1989NoYesNo
Shadowgate NES March 31, 1989YesYesNoPort of the Macintosh game by ICOM Simulations.
Game Boy Color January 1999YesYesYesPublished outside of Japan by Nintendo.
Uninvited NES September 21, 1989YesYesNoPort of the game by ICOM Simulations.
Rescue: The Embassy Mission NES December 1, 1989YesYesNoPort of the game by Infogrames.
Snoopy's Magic Show Game Boy April 28, 1990YesYesYesUses characters from the Peanuts comics.
Rocket Ranger NES June 1990NoYesNoDeveloped by Beam Software. Port of the game by Cinemaware.
The Bugs Bunny Birthday Blowout NES August 3, 1990YesYesYesUses characters from Looney Tunes.
North & South NES September 21, 1990YesYesNoPort of the game by Infogrames. Offshoot of the Belgian comic series Les Tuniques Bleues .
Ka-Blooey SNES December 1, 1990YesYesNoPort of the game by Mirrorsoft.
Mickey Mouse II/The Bugs Bunny Crazy Castle 2/Hugo Game Boy April 26, 1991YesYesYesUses characters from Disney productions, Looney Tunes, and the Hugo franchise.
Drakkhen SNES May 24, 1991YesYesNoPort of the game by Infogrames.
Dragon Wars NES August 9, 1991YesNoNoPort of the game by Interplay Productions.
Lagoon SNES December 12, 1991YesYesYesPort of the X68000 game by Zoom.
Track & Field in Barcelona NES February 2, 1992NoNoYesDeveloped by Konami. Port of the arcade game by Konami.
Spy vs. Spy Game Boy May 2, 1992YesYesNoBased on Spy vs. Spy.
Phalanx SNES August 7, 1992YesYesYesPort of the X68000 game by Zoom.
Game Boy Advance October 26, 2001YesYesYes
Mickey Mouse III: Yume Fuusen NES September 30, 1992YesNoNoMickey Mouse III uses characters from Disney productions. The game served as the base for Kid Klown in Night Mayor World.
Mickey's Dangerous Chase Game Boy December 18, 1992YesNoNoLicensed from Capcom.
The Blues Brothers SNES March 26, 1993YesNoNoLicensed from Titus France.
Mickey Mouse IV: Mahou no Labyrinth/Garfield Labyrinth Game Boy April 23, 1993YesNoYesUses characters from Disney productions and the Garfield franchise.
First Samurai SNES July 2, 1993YesYesYesPort of the game by Vivid Image.
Mickey Mouse: Magic Wands! Game Boy December 22, 1993YesNoNoUses characters from Disney productions.
Super Troll Islands SNES March 25, 1994YesYesYesLicensed from Millennium Interactive. Based on the Troll dolls.
Genocide 2 SNES August 5, 1994YesNoNoDeveloped by Bits Studio. Port of the X68000 game by Zoom.
Dragon View SNES August 26, 1994YesYesNoBased on Drakkhen.
Stone Protectors SNES November 1994YesYesNoDeveloped by Eurocom. Based on the Stone Protectors franchise.
Brutal SNES December 22, 1994YesNoNoDeveloped by Eurocom. Port of the game by GameTek.
Prehistorik Man Game Boy December 22, 1995YesNoNoPort of the game by Titus France.
Snoopy no Hajimete no Otsukai Game Boy December 21, 1996YesNoNoUses characters from the Peanuts franchise.
Bugs Bunny Collection Game Boy December 19, 1997YesNoNoUses characters from the Looney Tunes franchise.
Bugs Bunny: Crazy Castle 3 Game Boy Color January 29, 1999YesYesYesUses characters from the Looney Tunes franchise.
Shadowgate 64: Trials of the Four Towers Nintendo 64 May 31, 1999YesYesYesDeveloped by TNS and Infinite Ventures. Part of the Shadowgate franchise.
Catwoman Game Boy Color December 1999NoYesYesUses characters from DC Comics.
Bugs Bunny in Crazy Castle 4 Game Boy Color April 21, 2000YesYesYesUses characters from the Looney Tunes franchise.
Daikatana Nintendo 64 May 26, 2000NoYesYesPort of the game by Eidos Interactive.
Game Boy Color September 26, 2000NoNoYesDeveloped by Will. Port of the game by Eidos Interactive.
Tweety's High-Flying Adventure Game Boy Color August 11, 2000YesYesYesUses characters from the Looney Tunes franchise.
Batman Beyond: Return of the Joker Game Boy Color November 20, 2000NoYesYesPublished by Ubisoft. Uses characters from DC Comics.
PlayStation November 20, 2000YesYesYes
Nintendo 64 December 13, 2000NoYesYes
Tweety & The Magic Gems Game Boy Advance March 21, 2001YesYesYesUses characters from the Looney Tunes franchise.
Universal Studios Theme Parks Adventure GameCube December 7, 2001YesYesYesDeveloped by Nai'a Digital Works.
Boulder Dash EX Game Boy Advance September 16, 2002YesYesYesDeveloped by Vision Works. Based on Boulder Dash .
Woody Woodpecker Crazy Castle 5 Game Boy Advance December 6, 2002YesYesYesDeveloped by Tantalus Interactive. Uses characters from the Woody Woodpecker franchise.
Batman: Dark Tomorrow Xbox March 18, 2003YesYesYesDeveloped by HotGen. Uses characters from DC Comics.
GameCube March 21, 2003YesYesYes
Dai Senryaku VII: Modern Military Tactics Xbox February 16, 2005NoYesNoLicensed from SystemSoft.
Chicago Enforcer Xbox February 23, 2005NoYesNoPort of the game by Touchdown Entertainment.

Digital games

2007

2008

2009

2010

2011

2012

2013

2014

2015

2016

2017

2018

2019

2020

2021

2022

2023

2024

Canceled games

Related Research Articles

Sports Interactive Limited is a British video game developer based in London, best known for the Football Manager series. Founded by brothers Oliver and Paul Collyer in July 1994, the studio was acquired in 2006 by Sega, a Japanese video game publisher, and became part of Sega Europe. In addition to its work on Football Manager, the studio has also created a number of other sports-management simulations, including NHL Eastside Hockey Manager and Championship Manager Quiz, and is the former developer of Championship Manager.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Level-5 (company)</span> Japanese video game developer

Level-5 Inc. is a Japanese video game developer and publisher based in Fukuoka. The company was founded in October 1998 by Akihiro Hino after he departed from Riverhillsoft. Early in its history, the company enjoyed a close relationship with Sony Computer Entertainment, with many of its games then funded by and produced in conjunction with them. Level-5 began self-publishing its games in Japan by the late 2000s, with other companies such as Nintendo handling publishing worldwide. The company is best known for their Dark Cloud, Professor Layton, Inazuma Eleven, Ni no Kuni, Yo-kai Watch, and Snack World franchises.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">D3 Publisher</span> Japanese video game developer and publisher

D3 Publisher Inc. is a Japanese video game developer and publisher founded on February 5, 1992. The company is known for the Simple series of budget-priced video games. Their games have been released for the Game Boy Advance, Nintendo DS, Nintendo 3DS, Nintendo Switch, PlayStation Portable, PlayStation Vita, PlayStation 2, PlayStation 3, PlayStation 4, PlayStation 5, GameCube, Wii, Xbox, Xbox 360, Wii U, Android, and iOS.

Ronimo Games was a Dutch video game developer founded in 2007 by former students of the Utrecht School of the Arts.

The Japan Game Awards is the Japanese Ministry of Economy, Trade and Industry's awards ceremony, which was created in 1996 as the CESA Awards. While it represents the Japanese video game industry, it is not limited to Japanese video games, but also includes international video games.

Asphalt is a series of racing video games mainly developed and published by Gameloft. The series typically focuses on fast-paced arcade racing set in various locales throughout the world, tasking players to complete races while evading the local law enforcement. Gameplay includes teaming up with allied racers and gang groups to assist in police pursuits and shootout races against rival groups such as crime families and terrorists.

The eighth generation of video game consoles began in 2012, and consists of four home video game consoles: the Wii U released in 2012, the PlayStation 4 family in 2013, the Xbox One family in 2013, and the Nintendo Switch family in 2017.

In the video game industry, 2021 saw the release of many new titles. The numerous delays in software and hardware releases due to the continuation of the COVID-19 pandemic heavily impacted development schedules, leading to several games being delayed into 2022 or even postponed indefinitely. Additionally, computer and console hardware were impacted by the combined effects of a semiconductor shortage and a rising growth of bitcoin mining that strained the supply of critical components.

In the video game industry, 2022 saw the lingering effects of the COVID-19 pandemic on the industry, slowing hardware sales for most of the year as well as development delays for major titles. The industry continued its trend of acquisitions and mergers, highlighted by Microsoft announcing its plan to acquire Activision Blizzard for nearly $69 billion. The industry as a whole continued to deal with issues such as workplace harassment and discrimination, alongside crunch periods, leading to at least the quality assurance staff at three separate studios to vote to unionize.

In the video game industry, 2023 saw significant changes within larger publishers and developers. Microsoft, after having satisfied worldwide regulatory bodies, completed its US$69 billion acquisition of Activision Blizzard, making them the third largest game publisher in the world. Embracer Group, which had been in an acquisition spree over the previous few years, had an estimated $2 billion deal fall through, causing many of the studios under Embracer to either lay off staff or close entirely. Similar layoffs were seen at Unity, Amazon, ByteDance, Epic Games, Bungie, and Ubisoft, leading to over 9,000 jobs lost in the industry in 2023 and part of a larger trend of layoffs at technology companies in 2023.

References

  1. "Marenian Tavern Story: Patty and the Hungry God coming to PS4 on November 9 in Japan, Switch this winter". Gematsu. Retrieved August 31, 2020.
  2. "Asdivine Kamura". Kemco . Retrieved December 1, 2019.
  3. "Alphadia Genesis". Nintendo America. Retrieved August 8, 2020.
  4. "Alphadia Genesis". Nintendo Europe. Retrieved August 9, 2020.
  5. "アルファディア ジェネシス". Nintendo Japan. Retrieved August 9, 2020.