Wario's Flashin' Fruit Punch Splash
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Part of franchise:
Wario
(last 3 games)
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Strike a pose with a multitude of motion-based microgames in a brand-new entry in the WarioWare series! Grab a pair of Joy-Con controllers and get moving as you gently shake, punch, dance, wiggle, and even curtsey through over 200 lightning-fast microgames (minigames that last just a few hilarious seconds). A second player can use another set of Joy-Con controllers to join the treasure-guarding, sheep-twirling fun. Up to 4 players, each with one Joy-Con controller, can laugh out loud in the local Party Mode’s minigames like a dicey board game with Wario-style rules.
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Take on over 200 quick and quirky microgames - lightning-fast minigames filled with frantic fun - solo or with a friend! When his latest harebrained business scheme goes awry, Wario must use his signature style (and smell) to fix it. How? By playing a twisted collection microgames of course! From assembling a robot to pulling out a statue's armpit hair, the WarioWare: Get It Together! game is a comedic, cooperative microgame mashup.
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Legendary game worlds and fighters collide in the ultimate showdown—a new entry in the Super Smash Bros. series for the Nintendo Switch system! New fighters, like Inkling from the Splatoon series and Ridley from the Metroid series, make their Super Smash Bros. series debut alongside every Super Smash Bros. fighter in the series…EVER! Faster combat, new items, new attacks, new defensive options, and more will keep the battle raging whether you’re at home or on the go.
Part of franchise:
Hi-C
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Could be interesting
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Mario's Driving Range is a 2006 McDonald's browser game that was made as a part of the September 2006 Mario Happy Meal promotion. The game was released alongside the game Jammin' With Mario on the McDonald's Happy Meal website. It's not currently known what the contents of the game were, however it is rumored to be a golf game. As of 2025, no gameplay footage or builds of the game have resurfaced online and no archives for the swf files are indexed on the Wayback Machine.
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Jammin' With Mario is a 2006 McDonald's browser game that was made as a part of the September 2006 Mario Happy Meal promotion. The game was supposedly a music game that taught the player how to play the Mario theme with their keyboard. As of 2025, no gameplay or builds of the game have resurfaced online and no archives for the swf files are indexed on the Wayback Machine.
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On the website for the video game Harry Potter and the Order of the Phoenix there was plans for a promotional mini-game to be released alongside it. The game was labeled as coming soon under the "Mini-Game" tab on the official website for the game, however was never released. No details of the game were ever released and it is uncertain what the contents of the game were to be, apart from the game being built in Adobe Flash based on the link being labeled as "flashgame" within the site's HTML code.
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Crazy Hit is a game produced by U.F.O. Soft that was released together with Crazy Hit 2 (known as the Playstation Pokémon for using unlicensed art from the franchise) and a special controller to play both. It is currently not possible to find the game or recordings of it available, so the only image of it available is the one on the back of the set's box. From the box art and the description on it (in addition to the use of the controller), it is possible to deduce that it shares the same gameplay as Crazy Hit 2 (a whack-a-mole like game), but without the use of Pokémon. In Crazy Hit 2 it is possible to see on the initial screen that the game was made by Poho and Majorros, however without the file for this game, it is uncertain to say that this game was also produced by both developers.
A free 2001 advergame for members of the "WD-40 Fan Club". Largely forgotten about until 2022, when someone posted about it on the r/lostmedia subreddit, and a copy was located on the wayback machine.
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Play to Befriend a Pokémon! was a Flash game formerly available on Pokémon.com. It was a Pokémon Global Link promotion. The goal is to break blocks with a bouncing ball, similar to Breakout. Players use the paddle to keep the ball from falling out of bounds. When the ball hits blocks consecutively, the score increases by 100 each hit. Sometimes when a block is hit, an orb of its color will fall. These orbs, when caught by the paddle, are worth 500 points each. There are 4 levels, and the player starts with 3 lives. They may earn more lives and power-ups later. After playing, the orbs caught, depending on what kind, can be used to redeem 1 free Pokémon via the Pokémon Dream World, provided the player is signed in under their Pokémon Trainer Club account. These Pokémon are Vaporeon, Jolteon, Flareon, Espeon, Umbreon, Leafeon, and Glaceon. The game was removed after May 19, 2011, and the .swf file for it was actually deleted from the site.
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Yeah Yeah Beebiss I is a rumored lost game for the NES that was first mentioned in the June 1989 listing for mail-order video game service, Play It Again, where it would reappear until September before being removed from the listing and then show up on another mail-order video game service known as Funco. There's no known information about the game other than it's title, however there are various theories to the game, from it being a mistranslation of a Japanese game, with the most popular theory for this one being the game Rai Rai Kyonshis: Baby Kyonshi no Amida Daibouken, to the game being a copyright trap made up to spot other magazines who were copying them. As of 2022, none of them have been confirmed.