Nintendo 64 games 1996


















Doraemon 2: Nobita to Hikari no Shinden. Fighting Cup. Getter Love!! Iggy-kun no Bura 2 Poyon. King Hill 64 Extreme Snowboarding. Kira tto Kaiketsu! Knife Edge. Let's Smash. Magical Tetris Challenge featuring Mickey. Tokyo Electron. Nushi Tsuri Victor Interactive Software. Olympic Hockey Nagano ' Pachinko Nichi. Pocket Monsters Stadium. Rakuga Kids. Vic Tokai. Star Soldier: Vanishing Earth.

Super B-Daman Battle Phoenix Super Robot Spirits. Wayne Gretzky's 3D Hockey. Zelda no Densetsu: Toki no Ocarina. Akumajou Dracula Mokushiroku. Baku Bomberman 2. Bakuretsu Muteki Bangaioh. ESP Software. Beetle Adventure Racing. Electronic Arts Square. Choro Q 64 2. Densha de Go! Extreme-G 2.

Goemon Mononoke Sugoroku. J-League Tactics Soccer. Jinsei Game Kakutou Denshou: F-Cup Maniax. Last Legion UX. Lode Runner 3-D. Neon Genesis Evangelion. Ogre Battle Person of Lordly Caliber. Onegai Monsters. Pro PD Ultraman Battle Collection Robot Ponkottsu Nanatsu no Umi no Caramel. Shadowgate Trials of the Four Towers. Star Wars Episode I: Racer. Star Wars: Rogue Squadron. Super Robot Taisen Transformers: Beast Wars Metals Violence Killer Turok: New Generation. BioHazard 2. Olympic Hoshi no Kirby Itoi Shigesato no Bass Tsuri No.

Mario Tennis Nushi Tsuri Shiokaze Ninotte. Sin and Punishment: Successor of the Earth. Top Gear Hyper-Bike. Virtual Pro Wrestling 2: Oudou Keishou. Asmik Ace Entertainment. Zelda no Densetsu: Majora no Kamen. Derby Stallion Media Factory. Doubutsu no Mori. Hamster Monogatari Star Wars: Shadows of the Empire. NBA Hangtime. Turok: Dinosaur Hunter. GT Interactive Software. International Superstar Soccer Multi-Racing Championship. Interplay Entertainment.

F1 Pole Position NFL Quarterback Club Automobili Lamborghini. San Francisco Rush: Extreme Racing. WCW vs. Mortal Kombat Mythologies: Sub-Zero. Wayne Gretzky's 3D Hockey ' All-Star Baseball ' The 3DO Company.

Bust-A-Move 2: Arcade Edition. Chopper Attack. ClayFighter: Sculptor's Cut. Electro Brain. FIFA ' Fighters Destiny. Flying Dragon. Forsaken Fox Sports College Hoops ' Fox Interactive. Gex Enter the Gecko. That said, despite the similarities, the two games are far from the same. Another novel concept was the use of masks: There are 24 of them in the game and each gives Link new abilities and change the game in other ways. Release Date: April 26, Final Score: A ton of key Nintendo franchises either reached an important peak or were established on the N64, and perhaps the most pivotal of the new ones is Super Smash Bros.

Not only is Smash Bros. Smash Bros. While the PS1 beat the N64 to claim the throne for its console generation, it could be argued that the top games on the N64 were more influential than the premiere PS1 titles. Which are still great, by the way. But, like the next two games on this list, Mario Kart 64 is essentially a prototype for its genre.

Super Mario Kart helped establish the wacky character-based racing game as delightful fun, but Mario Kart 64 helped the genre successfully transition into the 3D era. Aside from laying the foundation for the rest of the uber-successful post-2D Mario Kart games, Mario Kart 64 offers rock-solid gameplay that can be as basic or complex as you want to make it, as the competitive speedrunning scene has proven.

Release Date: Sept. I posit that of all the games on this list, none of them have a stronger influence on modern games than Super Mario When the game was released, critics and fans knew immediately that Super Mario 64 was a legendary title. A lot of 3D games of the era have not aged well, but Super Mario 64 is still tremendously fun to pick up and play today. Donkey Kong 64 is the only Donkey Kong game of its kind.

The three-dimensional Donkey Kong adventure thrives on exploration. Each Kong has a set of moves to master along with a plethora of collectibles. Finding every last banana as your respective Kong is a fun feat for players who seek one-hundred percent completion. The elusive two-hundred-and-first Golden Banana is an achievement to behold.

Back in , playing a Donkey Kong game in three dimensions was exciting and, ultimately, very rewarding. A surprise setting for a final boss fight rounds out this gem.

That yellow cartridge sure does pack a punch! Captain Falcon honestly has it pretty hard. And while all could have been destroyed by a single misprogrammed control, F-Zero X is rivaled only by Wave Race 64 in terms of sheer controlling virtuosity.

Ah, Captain Falcon— forgive us for badmouthing you. We love your game. Please love us, too. Mode 7 graphics might have given the original F-Zero an unprecedented sense of depth and speed to the SNES gamer, but the 3D powers of N64 completely redefined the experience.

F-Zero X featured loops, corkscrews, jumps, tubes, and cylinders that allowed for ridiculous, borderline disorienting tracks. Topping it all off was the speed, perhaps the first game to truly capture the sensation, and they managed to deliver it with an incredibly smooth framerate.

A simple, vertical loop, filled with racers, and the objective to be the last one standing made Death Race an addictive wonder. Few things could quite match the joy of smashing an opponent into oblivion at mph and then seeing how quickly you could finish off the rest.

It was only natural, then, that Nintendo would want to branch its newfound juggernaut out into other directions to capitalize on its success. The sheer-hardcoreness of the game was even emblemified in the Game Boy Color cartridge; twice as big as regular games and requiring a separate AAA battery to run the rumble feature. More than a simple downport of the N64 title, Mario Golf for Game Boy Color took the same basic gameplay as the console version and fleshed it out with a unique role-playing storyline.

Strange as this marriage may have seemed, the end result was an inspired sports game that featured a lengthy single-player adventure and a staggering wealth of content to enjoy. Perhaps most importantly, though, Mario Golf proved that a Mario spin-off can have all the depth of a proper Mario adventure, and for that it deserves a special commendation.

My father and I spent months competing against each other in the game, trying to see who would be the first one to reach the 18th hole. Both of us were terrible, of course, but I was slightly better despite not being able to grasp the nuances of wind speed or putting , always able to make it just a bit further than him before quitting in frustration.

The Nintendo 64 version certainly looked like a lot of fun, but it was the Game Boy one, with its simpler, sprite-based graphics, that appealed to me most.



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