Popular games for platform Handheld Electronic LCD

31.12.1991

Super Mario World (also known as Super Mario World Game Watch and Super Mario Bros. 4) is a licensed wristwatch videogame made by Nelsonic Industries, based on the Super NES game Super Mario World.

01.06.1978

Space Invaders is an arcade video game developed by Tomohiro Nishikado and released in 1978. It is one of the earliest shooting games and the aim is to defeat waves of aliens with a laser cannon to earn as many points as possible.

31.12.1993

The LCD version of Streets of Rage is a handheld game released by Tiger Electronics based on the Sega game, Streets of Rage. It was released in both Electronic and Pocket Arcade form, although the former appears to be quite rare.

31.12.1989

The Brick Game is a series of models of handheld electronic games. They are usually called "x" games in 1, with X usually being a high number, which are actually game modes, not different games. The games are usually clones of arcade games to the LCD screen, like Tetris, Breakout, Pong, Battle City and others. They are very cheap alternatives for handheld gaming, making them prominent in underdeveloped countries.

31.12.1995

A handheld game featuring Senninha, a mascot character based on Ayrton Senna.

01.01.1970

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31.12.1992

31.12.1995

The handheld version of Daytona USA is an LCD game released by Tiger Electronics based on the arcade release of Daytona USA. It was released as part of Tiger's short-lived "Vrt-X" range, in which the game would be projected as a pseudo-hologram image onto the screen. Daytona USA stands as the only Sega game to receive the Vrt-X treatment, although there were others for Street Fighter II, Mortal Kombat 3, franchises such as Mighty Morphin' Power Rangers and Congo: The Movie. The range did not exist for very long.

31.12.1984

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01.01.1970

A variant of whack-a-mole where the player has to memorize a pattern shown and repeat the pattern correctly to score points, akin to The Simon Game toy from the 1990's.

31.12.1989

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01.01.1970

Same as the VT3xx-based game. A Tetris clone similar to Magic Diamond, though it is seemingly coded differently. The game features a "special mode" which merely turns the screen upside down.

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01.01.1970