Popular games for platform Handheld Electronic LCD
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.
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.
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.
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.
Princess Toadstool's Castle Run Game is one of the three LCD game watches belonging to the Super Mario Bros. Watch line released in 1990 as promotional items by McDonald's in the US and Japan. It is the first game to feature Princess Toadstool as the sole playable character. The gameplay is identical to that of many LCD racing games such as Super Mario Race.
Banana Sbang is a LCD game from VTech's Time & Fun Series created in 1981.
Duke Nukem 3D is the name of a handheld video game that was sold as a standalone unit in the "Grip Games" toy line by Tiger Electronics. Loosely based on the desktop PC game of the same name, the unit was developed and manufactured by Tiger Electronics and published by GT Interactive in 1997.
An LCD laptop with over 20 educational games in 5 categories covering pre-school curriculum.
Handheld game based on the 101 Dalmatians movie.
A keychain port of Tempest. it was released in 1988.
A wristwatch port of Double Dragon, released in 1989.
This is the second version of the Cyber Poké Ball, a simple RPG set in the Pokémon universe and contained within a handheld shaped like a Poké Ball. The units come in several colors and patterns. In the game, players explore a map to find wild Pokémon and battle them. A weakened wild Pokémon can be captured and added to the party; the player may own a maximum of three Pokémon at a time. Pokémon automatically evolve upon reaching certain level thresholds. Players may challenge area bosses, which will grant access to new parts of the world upon their defeat. They may also use the device's connectivity features to battle other nearby players. Special chips, which came packaged with various Pokémon toys made by Bandai, could be inserted into the device in order to access new content.
A "whack-a-mole" style game in which the player must use the fire and directional buttons to hit one of the four corresponding targets on the screen. The player loses if either he/she presses the wrong button, or taking too long to press. This game is variously known as "Hammer Attack", "Ghost Hunter" or "Alien Darts" in some packaging manuals. On the top of the screen, a symbol is used to represent the correct/wrong button press, usually "X" and "O", or in some version, a smile or frown.
Sodatete! Mushiking is a set of handheld LCD games based on the Mushiking franchise.