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.
A tank game similar to Battle City, usually released in Brick Games. The player's goal is to shoot down as many enemy tanks as possible to obtain a high score. But with each level often feature "boss battle" in the end where the player would face off a large tank. Some versions omit the boss level and increases the level instantly after the target number has been achieved. The player's tank can easily be identified with a single block (sometimes flashing) on the back which the enemy tanks don't have.
Effectively a basic lawn mowing game, but the player controls a magic wand that can move freely in any direction. Later hacked to create Pumpkin Surprise, which is nearly identical to the original.
Another Soukoban clone. Later hacked to create Feed Sort, which is nearly identical to the original.
Variant of Fancy Match included in Lexibook's Barbie Portable Game Console.
A Soukoban clone; similar to the previously-released Push the Box by JungleTac.
A boat racing game. Later hacked to create Jet Skiing.
Based on Jungletac's previously-released Danger Zone. Later hacked to create Hay Bales; the hacked version bizarrely replaces Donald and Goofy's faces with Duster from Mother 3, while leaving their bodies (and even Donald's hat) intact.
The player must guide Mickey Mouse to collect items while avoiding other surfers and obstacles. Later hacked to create Surf Adventure; the hacked version replaces Mickey with Konami's Goemon.
A Puzzloop or Zuma clone.
The Hatsune Mikutchi is a licensed Tamagotchi Nano model, released in March 2023, based on Hatsune Miku, a Vocaloid software voice bank developed by Crypton Future Media.
Top Gun: The Second Mission is a portable handheld LCD game based on the NES game of the same name.
The player must collect items under the sea while avoiding obstacles. Later hacked to create Starry Night, which is nearly identical to the original; some Starry Night recolor Flounder blue, while others leave him yellow.
Crash Bandicoot is a licensed platform game developed and published by Tiger Electronics and published by Universal Interactive in North America, released on a handheld dedicated console in 1998. Is the cheap LCD version of Crash Bandicoot (99X). According to George Fergan, one of the developers of Crash Bandicoot (LCD Tiger game) and Crash (99X), their small team was divided: some people wanted to make Mr. Crumb, while others wanted to make Mr. Crool. The solution came when the team decided to use both characters for two different versions of the game. Mr. Crumb would appear as the main villain in the most powerful version, Tiger 99x. While Mr. Crool would appear as the main villain in the cheap LCD version.
An LCD game based on Mickey Mouse. It was released in 1984.
A port of Mickey and Friends in the wristwatch format.