Platform: Nintendo Entertainment System
Jeopardy!
Castlevania II: Simon's Quest
Tom and Jerry
Final Fantasy
Yoshi
Pictionary: The Game of Video Quick Draw
Chubby Cherub
The Three Stooges
Armadillo
Kung Fu
Who Framed Roger Rabbit
Color a Dinosaur
Thunderbirds
Joe & Mac
Wild Gunman
Snoopy's Silly Sports Spectacular!
Donkey Kong
Crystalis
MTV Remote Control
Ninja Gaiden III: The Ancient Ship of Doom
Stack-up
Monster Party
Ms. Pac-Man
Tetris
The Simpsons: Bart vs. The Space Mutants
River City Ransom
Metal Gear
Mega Man 6
Golf
New Trivia!
Ice Climber
Road Fighter
Son Son
Mario Bros.
Balloon Fight
Godzilla 2: War of the Monsters
10-Yard Fight
Duck Hunt
Gyromite
Battletoads
Little Nemo: The Dream Master
Ironsword: Wizards & Warriors II
Bomberman
Metroid
Captain America and the Avengers
Chiller
Super Mario Bros.
Tetris
Zombie Nation
Super Mario Bros. 3
Tagin' Dragon
Viewing Single Trivia
▲
1
▼
Nintendo had strict licensing policies for the NES as a way to encourage quality over quantity, in hopes of avoiding the fate of Atari during the video game crash of 1983. Third parties were limited to releasing 5 titles per year for the NES, all titles had to be reviewed by Nintendo before they would be licensed, and the console had a system to lock out unauthorized games that did not contain the necessary patented chip as a way to enforce Nintendo's control.
A combination of third-party developer pushback, legal challenges, and competition from other console manufacturers such as Sega eventually forced them to relax their policies.
A combination of third-party developer pushback, legal challenges, and competition from other console manufacturers such as Sega eventually forced them to relax their policies.
Comments (0)
You must be logged in to post comments.