Japanese Fans Vote On Top 30 NES Games 79
Thanks to 1UP for their report on a Japanese poll rating the top 30 Famicom (NES) games of all time, as conducted for an upcoming Tokyo museum exhibition. The report comments that this poll is "an interesting look at the titles that were big in the early days of Japanese gaming, as well as what's held up in retrospect", and the Dragon Quest series (Dragon Warrior in the U.S.) is particularly well-represented, since "...all four Famicom games in the series made the top 10, compared to only one Final Fantasy." Also pointed out: "It's also interesting to see what's ahead of Super Mario Brothers 3, the most popular NES game in the United States. In Japan, they'd rather play Ice Climber and Balloon Fight."
They do love there dragon quest (Score:1)
Re:They do love there dragon quest (Score:5, Informative)
Re:They do love there dragon quest (Score:2)
I've never quite understood why carts, modems, and mp3s use bits instead of bytes.
Re:They do love there dragon quest (Score:2)
Re:They do love there dragon quest (Score:1)
Re:They do love there dragon quest (Score:5, Funny)
Third section down under "How popular is the Dragon Quest series". [planetnintendo.com]
Wow (Score:1)
1. Legend of Zelda
2. Super Mario Brothers 3
3. Super Mario Brothers
4. Metroid
There's too much I can't even choose myself. Anyway, I'm glad that River City Ransom made the list, it seems appropriately placed.
That's because you own a NES and not a Famicom (Score:1, Redundant)
Amercian Classics Right At the Top (Score:3, Insightful)
Super Mario Brothers - 2
Mario Brothers - 3
The Legend of Zelda - 4
Final Fantasy III - 7
I've never owned a Nintendo yet have played all these. Definitely deserving of their placement in the top 10.
Re:Amercian Classics Right At the Top (Score:1, Interesting)
I know that I had tried playing it a while back (ie years ago), but the project was still only in the initial stages (and, unfortunately, many translation projects die out shortly after they are started.)
Or has Square finally released a translated version outside of Japan?
(Or perhaps you can read Japanese? I dunno...)
Re:Amercian Classics Right At the Top (Score:3, Informative)
Though I suspect the parent doesn't know that US FF 3 is really FF 6.
Re:Amercian Classics Right At the Top (Score:2)
It's basically like FF5 as far as gameplay goes (you get crystals to change classes), and the graphics were amazing for its time. However, I prefered part 2 myself, which you can get for your psx/ps2 if you want as part of Final Fantasy Origins. They were doing a remake of FF3 for the wonderswan (as they did for FF1 and FF2) but it never seemed to appear...
Re:American Classics Right At the Top (Score:1)
Re:Amercian Classics Right At the Top (Score:4, Interesting)
Those funny guys at Square, not being able to keep counts... Final Fantasy 1 was the only FF NES game to make it over to the States on the NES, Final Fantasy 4 and 6 on the SNES made it over as FF 2 and 3 - this is the FF 3 most people have played. Once Square went over to the PSX they synched the game numbering with FF 7, and have brought over FF 2 and 5 as part of collection CDs on the PSX.
To have played the original FF 3, you would need either a translated ROM image, or you would need to know Japanese and have imported it or something.
BTW (Score:2)
Re:Article on Amazon, wtf? (Score:2)
NES ranking... sports? koei? legacy vs quality? (Score:3, Insightful)
I think certain franchines (such as Final Fantasy) have gone on to do wonderful things, but all things considered, I feel that "NES Dragon Warrior IV" is probably a better game than "NES Final Fantasy".
I wonder how much of this list is influenced by how these games were further developed on other platforms. Surprisingly, it doesn't seem terribly bias in that catergory. However, I believe it was done in the US, we'd have exactly that problem.
I'm surprised 'Destiny of an Emperor' didn't make the list, because that was a really solid title. Also, there are several sports titles (like the excellent Famicom-only Soccer games) which aren't listed. I would also expect a historical strategy game like 'Romance of the Three Kingdoms' or some other Koei title.
I'm exceptionally surprised that 'Goonies II' made the list because that's a real random footnote in the history of NES games.
Re:NES ranking... sports? koei? legacy vs quality? (Score:2)
I'm surprised to see some of the familiar names (Liu Bei, Guan Yu, Zhang Fei, etc.) in other games (Nobunaga series from Koei).
It was supposed to be based on real chinese story. Any way to validate this?
Capcom originally published the game, but it wasn't developed in house. Interestingly, you can tell that the guy that did the music for this game also did Rolling Thunder for Capcom too.
Re:NES ranking... sports? koei? legacy vs quality? (Score:1)
Re:NES ranking... sports? koei? legacy vs quality? (Score:2)
Hey you guys!!!! (Score:4, Funny)
The Goonies (Score:1, Interesting)
Re:Hey you guys!!!! (Score:3, Informative)
My list with my impressions at the time. (Score:5, Insightful)
SMB I (Spent countless hours exploring secrets), II (At the time it was very weird and III (Pinnacle),
MegaMan 1 (challenging),2 (most popular) & 3 (pinnacle) (The rest are just fillers)
Castlevania 1 (Challenging), 2 (What's up with those weird clues?) 3 (Pinnacle),
Ninja Gaiden I (Cinema Displays!!!!), II(Great Music, action, etc), III (Hmmm.. Paralax scrolling and a Strider-type sword.. kool)
Shadow of the Ninja and S.C.A.T (Great games from Natsume)
Journey To Silius (Sunsoft's masterpiece, after Blaster Master, Fester and Batman - Not counting Return of the Joker
Contra (WOOWWWWW...), Super C (Double Wooow...)
**Adventure**
Zelda I (Dodongo.. what kind of name is that) II (Very challenging, great graphics.. masterpiece)
Metroid & Kid Icarus (VERY Unique games!!)
Crystalis (Much better and Refined than Zelda)
The Inmortal (Wow, american companies can make games!!)
Bionic Commando (Hitler?!?!?!?)
Goonies - Really cool...
**Beat'em up**
Double Dragon I (challenging), II (Fun!! 2 Player action), II (What happened here??)
River City Ramsom (Who can't forget fighting the final stage while listening to the Double Dragon BGM)
Battletoads - Hard and Weird!!!
**Shooters (Not the like of Doom/Quake we're talking THE original shooters)**
Zanac (Wow that's intense!!!)/Guardian Legend (Intensity with great graphics and RPG/Adventure)
Gradius (Hard) / Lifeforce (Cool.. 30 lives, I guess they're making up for the first one)
Gyruss (Really cool)
**Sports**
Baseball Stars (Greatest baseball game on 8 bit.. first to create your own players)
Tecmo Bowl (Just plain fun - Hide your controller from your oponent)
Baseball - Just fun.
Track n'Field - 1st to do In game adverstisement???, Game within a game (gradius).
Excitebike... (track editor??)
Mike Tyson's Punch Out (Remember, dodge Mike for 1:30)
**RPG**
Dragon Warrior I (What's this weird game...), II (Hmmm.. I'm kinda liking this type of games).. III (Masterpiece)
Final Fantasy - (Wow.. cool RPG..with Graphics!)
ShadowGate / DejaVu
Ultima Quest of The Avatar - Really LOONG.
Startropics.. Fun in the islands.
Ice Climber! Balloon Fight! (Score:5, Interesting)
Think about it, what are your favorite games from NES/Genesis to play with your friends? If you're like me and my friends, it was Contra, Streets of Rage, etc.
What do these games all have in common? - 2 players simultaneously! Play Halo on co-op mode, Mario Kart: Double Dash, hell, even the original mario bros was a so-so game that became SO much more fun with 2 players on at once. Ice Climber was simply from an era before NES became really popular (when games were labeled as part of the "Action Series," "Sports Series," etc.)
Re:Ice Climber! Balloon Fight! (Score:4, Interesting)
It was never clear if you were supposed to be friends or foes, and that lack of distinction kept the game sessions hot and fun.
Personally, I hope someone in Japan sees this list and makes a GBA version of Ice-Climber, so that 4 people can work with / compete against eachother to reach the top of that mountain alive. It was a genius design then, and it would be a breath of fresh air now.
Re:Ice Climber! Balloon Fight! (Score:2)
You can get Ice Climber for the eReader, but the problem is that it's single-player only -- there's no link features. It seems like a waste, as although the game is entertaining in SP, it really shines in the friend-and-sometimes-foe MP mode you de
SMB 3 should be above Ballon Fight (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:SMB 3 should be above Ballon Fight (Score:2)
Also, what kind of stupid poll only polls somehwere around 15,000 people to determine the most popular game for use in a museum? If I was curator for this, I'd have to have at least a million votes...especially considering the popularity of the machine.
A whopping 465 people saying SMB3 is the best NES game ever isn't all that inspiring.
re:15000 person sample is huge (Score:2, Informative)
Re:SMB 3 should be above Ballon Fight (Score:2)
I guess I was looking at this more like an election, since there were so many possible choices. Maybe poll was a bad term to use.
Re:SMB 3 should be above Ballon Fight (Score:2)
Re:SMB 3 should be above Ballon Fight (Score:2)
WHAT?! (Score:1)
Re:WHAT?! (Score:1)
Also, Rad Racer? C'mon. I know it's Squaresoft and all, but it really wasn't *that* great, with or without 3D Glasses (heh). Not top 50 material, for sure.
Is it nostalgia or better? (Score:2)
This is particularly interesting in the realm of RPGs, in my opinion. I find games
Re:Is it nostalgia or better? (Score:2)
In my personal opinion, what happens with early RPGs is that the void in graphics is filled by your imagination. You might be more comfortable with the way you imagine things than what a director/scenario designer may do.
A typical example is a movie based in a book, If the director's vision is very different
Yeah, right (Score:1)
ExciteBike?
Goonies II?
This is even worse than Nintendo's own top 100 list.
Re:Yeah, right (Score:5, Insightful)
Excitebike had its own track editor and the animation was off the hook. I remember people crashing on purpose just to laugh at the animation
The Goonies was MASSIVE (It was one of the first games that made you keep track of your location with your own map -I made my own goonies map-). Of course, if you think about newer games (16 bit Super Metroid, PSX Simphony of the Night and the GBA Castlevanias), this game is not long at all.
I don't know your age, but usually situating yourself in that year, and comparing it with what you had seen before does the job to make a good assessment of the impact of the game in its time.
I'm pretty sure that in 2018 people will make comments like this about the innovative games of today, but hey... C'est la vie.
Re:Yeah, right (Score:2)
Actually, I think the only difference was that when you lost in the arcade version, you'd kick a can or something, which didn't happen on the NES version. But thats it.
Of course, this is all IMHO.
Re:Yeah, right (Score:1)
Balloon Fight (Score:2)
Joust came out in arcades in 1983, Balloon Fight on the NES in 1986.
Re:Balloon Fight (Score:2)
Incidentally, the cartridge also has a bunch of these other top 30's - Super Mario 1, Mario Bros, Ice Climber, Balloon Fight, Excitebike, Twinbee, Mappy, Lode Runner, and Bomberman. I never knew Twinbee was popular, but I always love
Waxing on NES (Score:2, Insightful)
Funny story: I went to FuncoLand to pick up some games that I always wanted but never had. I mentioned my old console and the kid behind the counter rolled his eyes, "It's not worth a lot." I informed him that I would sooner cut out my liver than sell my NES and he perked right up and told me all about his top NES pick
Japanese RPGs (Score:1)
Re:Japanese RPGs (Score:1)
smb3 vs. mario bros (Score:1)
Re:smb3 vs. mario bros (Score:2, Informative)
Final Fantasy (Score:2)
Groovie Gaming.. (Score:1)
Re:Groovie Gaming.. (Score:1)
There's also ports of Loom to both the PC Engine (Turbo Grafx-16) and the FM Towns platforms. The FM Towns port is rather rare and had additional voices and audio beyond that of the PC CD-ROM, and it was in both English and Japanese. There was also a 256 color version of Zak McKraken for FM Towns. So, y
wait a minute!? (Score:2)
What about... (Score:2, Interesting)
I guess that's part of what makes Nintendo so cool - the sense of nostalgia that comes along with getting to play a game you haven't played in years. Or, being able to meet people you didn't grow up with, but talking about video games and how cool Excitebike was. I'm sure the same thing will happen with Playstation 2 when it
Golgo-13 (Score:2)
Looks like I'll have to stop by gamestop and pick it up for $2
Lots of earlier classics (Score:1)
Re:Lots of earlier classics (Score:1)
Remember, also, that some of those 3rd party titles may not have been released in Japan, or that the Super Famicom was probably already available in Japan by the time they did.
For example, no Megaman, no Strider; in fact, very few platform games other than Mario. I think this is in part because the system was released there in 1984, the sunset days of arcade ports being console gaming's bread and butter. Afterwards, the prevaling trend was towards more complex action
Super Dodge Ball! (Score:1)
Re:Super Dodge Ball! (Score:2)
I won't deny that it was fun, but once both players get to a certain point in skill, it becomes a game of catch. After a couple of rentals, me and my brother wouldn't be able to hit each other, because each of use had the timing down so that we could catch whatever the opponent threw.
Re:Super Dodge Ball! (Score:1)
The Good ol' Days (Score:1)
Ahh. . . The memories. . . (Score:1)
Which gets me thinking about some of my fave games for the NES: