Super Mahjong 2: Honkaku 4-nin Uchi
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Part of collection:
Super Mahjong
(last 3 games)
Super Mahjong 3 is a Miscellaneous game, published by I'Max, which was released in Japan in 1994.
A mahjong game for the Super Famicom and the third in the Super Mahjong series from I'Max.
Super Mahjong 2: Honkaku 4-nin Uchi is a Miscellaneous game, published by I'Max, which was released in Japan in 1993.
Could be interesting
Real Football / Soccer is a series of mobile football/soccer games by Gameloft that has been released annually since 2004.
Jissen! Mahjong Shinan is a Miscellaneous game, developed by Syscom and published by ASK, which was released in Japan in 1995.
Shodankurai Nintei: Shodan Pro Mahjong is a Miscellaneous game, developed by Khaos and published by Gaps, which was released in Japan in 1995.
Super Nichibutsu Mahjong 2: Zenkoku Seiha-hen is a Miscellaneous game, developed and published by Nichibutsu, which was released in Japan in 1993.
Real Football / Soccer is a series of mobile football/soccer games by Gameloft that has been released annually since 2004.
Feel like an NFL Superstar in Madden NFL 20. Be the Face of an NFL franchise where the decisions you make matter in your journey to become an NFL Superstar in ‘FACE OF THE FRANCHISE: QB1’. Feel the emotion, personality, and power of NFL Superstars with ‘SUPERSTAR X-FACTOR’, an all-new abilities progression system that reveals special abilities for today’s most exciting NFL Superstars heightening the level strategy and excitement in every game.
Real Football / Soccer is a series of mobile football/soccer games by Gameloft that has been released annually since 2004.
Real Football / Soccer is a series of mobile football/soccer games by Gameloft that has been released annually since 2004.
Real Football / Soccer is a series of mobile football/soccer games by Gameloft that has been released annually since 2004.
Mahjong Kazoku is a Mahjong game released only in Japan for the Famicom Disk System. Mahjong Kazoku ("Mahjong Family") is a standard Mahjong simulation game for Nintendo's Famicom Disk System. It is a one-on-one version of the game, rather than the standard four-player board game arrangement, and it incorporates many of the various and byzantine scoring rules of the game. Irem developed and published the game but left a mysterious licensing credit to Ox Inc. on the title screen. It's possible the game is a port of an obscure Japanese Mahjong computer game, or at least borrows some of its coding for the AI opponent or scoring systems.