Popular games for collection Doraemon
A video game based on the 33rd Doraemon film.
A 3DS game based on the thirty-sixth Doraemon movie.
A second Doraemon game for Nintendo 3DS based on the 35th anniversary film of the same name.
A second Doraemon-licensed 3DS game released in 2016.
Doraemon 2: Nobita no Toys Land Daibouken is an Action game, developed by SAS Sakata and published by Epoch, which was released in Japan in 1993.
Pocket no Naka no Doraemon is a Strategy game, developed and published by Bandai, which was released in Japan in 2001.
Doraemon 2: Nobita to Hikari no Shinden (Doraemon 2: Nobita and the Temple of Light) is an action game for the Nintendo 64. It was released only in Japan in 1998 . The game is based on the Japanese manga Doraemon and is the second in the Nintendo 64 series, it was preceded by Doraemon: Nobita to Mittsu no Seirei Ishi and followed by Doraemon 3: Nobi Dai no Machi SOS!, all only released in Japan.
Doraemon 3: Nobita no Machi SOS! is an action game for the Nintendo 64. It was released only in Japan in 2000. The game is based on the Japanese manga Doraemon and has is the sequel to two N64 games, Doraemon: Nobita to Mittsu no Seireiseki and Doraemon 2: Nobita to Hikari no Shinden, all only released in Japan.
Taking a different route to its maze-based predecessor, this Doraemon game is a side scrolling platformer with a simple, colourful look. You have to rescue your friends who have dived into various books and are pursued by the inhabitants within. You start off having to avoid the wandering beasties, but eventually get hold of such items as a gun that freezes anything in your path for a moment. Along the way you get to ride on dinosaurs, crawl under moving stone blocks, creep along precarious ledges and slide down water chutes.
Two players control a spaceship defending a city by shooting enemy spaceships throughout many different levels.
Doraemon 3: Nobita to Toki no Hougyoku is an Action game, developed by AIM and published by Epoch, which was released in Japan in 1994.
Doraemon: Yume Dorobou to 7-nin no Gozans is a 1993 platformer by Sega for the Sega Mega Drive tying into the Doraemon media franchise. B jumps. C shoots your gun, which stuns enemies so you can safely jump on them and use them as platforms. The longer you hold C, the more powerful your shots get; sufficiently powerful shots can destroy enemies.
Doraemon Waku-waku Pocket Paradise is an action game for the Sega Game Gear. It is based upon the 1979 Doraemon anime series.
Granbo is a Role-Playing game, published by Capcom, which was released in Japan in 2001.
The fourth and final Doraemon platformer for the Super Famicom. Doraemon is a blue cat robot who came from the future to protect a Japanese boy named Nobita. Nobita always gets himself in all kinds of troubles, so his grandson in the future decided to help In this game, Doraemon and friends decide to visit the moon.
The game was produced and released in conjunction with the 30 year anniversary event of Doraemon's manga. The purpose is to collect "memorial shots," which are excerpts of comics in action scenes inserted between scenes while watching dialogue between characters. The package illustrations are the anime pictures of the time, but the in-game graphics and settings such as calling Shizuka Minamoto "Shizu-chan" are in compliance with the manga, and there are dialogue scenes and quizzes that can not be understood without perusing the manga, making this a unique game that is clearly different in its target audience than before.
A Doraemon action game for Game Boy.
Doraemon: Taiketsu Himitsu Dougu!! is a Game Boy action game on 1991. Doraemon rescues Nobita and others through a maze created by a time machine running amok. There are also shooters and bonus stages.
Doraemon: Aruke Aruke Labyrinth is a 1999 video game developed and published by Epoch for the Game Boy Color exclusively in Japan.
Doraemon Wii: Himitsu Dougu-ou Ketteisen! is a party game on Wii, released on 2007. Like Mario Party 8, you can roll dice with a Wii remote or play mini-games with four people. It was the first Wii software in the Doraemon game series. Mainly a board game.
A game software in which you can play mini games such as picture matches and flag raising. There are 10 games in all, and you can play them against each other using a Game Link Cable.
One of the earliest video games based on the Doraemon franchise. It was released exclusively in Japan for the Famicom by Hudson.