Games That Defined The Super Nintendo (SNES)

The Best SNES Games for the Super Nintendo's History

The 16-bit era might just have been the most exciting time in the video game industry. Rivalries were never quite as intense as those between Nintendo and Sega, not to mention underdogs like NEC/Hudson (with the TurboGrafx-16) and SNK’s Neo-Geo. Nintendo knew that in order to take back market share from Sega, their Super Nintendo Entertainment System would have to provide gamers with some show-stopping titles.

Nintendo delivered in essentially every genre, but especially excelled in RPGs (with its temporary relationship with Squaresoft), platformers, and racing. The SNES still lives on as one of the most popular and collectible consoles of all time.

In this installment of the Games That Defined Series, I actually had a tough time narrowing down the list of titles to feature. There are a number of otherwise worthy titles, that I had to stick in the honorable mentions list in order to keep this article from going on forever. Regardless, I hope you enjoy this piece and I look forward to hearing your memories of the Super Nintendo in the comments section below.

See Also: The Cheapest SNES Games Worth Your Time & The Best Undiscovered SNES Games

Super Mario World

Super Mario World ScreenshotAs amazing as the original Super Mario Bros. series was on the NES, Mario fans needed something a little extra to show up Sonic the Hedgehog and give them a reason to upgrade from the popular NES. This breakthrough platforming title gave the Super Nintendo its initial boost in the war against the Sega Genesis.

Nintendo took some of the innovative elements hinted at in Super Mario Bros. 3 and pushed them to what was then the limit of what a platformer was capable of.

Super Mario World kept the same basic formula as its predecessors, but added enough new and improved features to outperform previous installments. The addition of Yoshi is also to be commended as it added to the depth to the gameplay.

What really set Super Mario World apart from its 8-bit siblings is the length of this masterpiece. While most platform games were often categorized as “Adventure”, or “Action Adventure” games, Super Mario World is one of the few games that actually felt like an adventure. The game’s 72 enjoyable levels are just the tip of the proverbial iceberg. Many of the levels feature multiple exits (there are 96 exits in all), which lead to different levels on the world map. Devoted fans will spend many hours uncovering all of the secrets.
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Legend of Zelda: Link to the Past

Link to the Past Screenshot“We’re sorry, but the princess is in another castle.” For once, this is not to be the case in this Nintendo classic. After a few short hours of game play I fondly remember having Princess Zelda in my possession, albeit for a few short moments.

The third game in Nintendo’s acclaimed Zelda series, A Link to the Past ranks near Ocarina of Time as one of the greatest titles for a Nintendo platform. After The Adventure of Link’s experimentation with sidescrolling, A Link to the Past returns to the top-down roots of the original, but spruces up the experience with updated visuals.

Even though, Link to the Past was an early SNES release, the developers were still able to make the most of the new technology in order to create one of the most detailed, gorgeous, and expansive games of the 16-bit era and beyond. Link to the Past was one of the first 8 megabit cartridges, and that extra memory was home to not one, but two huge overworlds, and more than a dozen labyrinthine dungeons to explore.

In addition to the fitting graphics and engaging environments, Link to the Past also benefited from remarkable audio. Longtime composer Koji Kondo wrote several tracks for this unforgettable Zelda soundtrack.

The game’s wonderfully conceived exploration elements, environmental puzzles, colorful graphics and inspired soundtrack help it to stand out above the cream of the Zelda crop.
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Donkey Kong Country Series

Donkey Kong Country ScreenshotEven with graphics and sound capabilities above Sega’s 16-bit machine and a solid library of games, the Super Nintendo still had a lot of catch-up to do with Sega in order to achieve world domination. The Genesis achieved solid footing in the market and Sega was prepping their 32-bit successors (yes, both the 32X and the Saturn), so Nintendo had to pull out all the stops to capture the attention of cutting-edge gamers.

In order to give the illusion that the SNES could pump out some cartoon-like 3D graphics, Rare’s development teams pieced together a way to convert 24-bit animation sequences into a format that a 16-bit console could handle by creating on a high-end SGI workstation and then porting them to the SNES.

The technique was quite successful as Nintendo fanboys everywhere were pointing to the game and mocking their Sega Genesis-owning friends (who would later answer back with Vectorman). The Donkey Kong Country series eventually became the cash cow for Nintendo as it spawned another two installments without much further innovation.

Overall, each game in the series was a solid platformer with smooth animation and a playful soundtrack. While the games aren’t quite as timeless as the Mario or Zelda series, they are a nostalgic trip full of old-school run-and-jump goodness.
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Star Fox

Star Fox SNES ScreenshotThe first (and one of the few) games to bear the Super FX Chip technology, Star Fox was a technical marvel as far as Super Nintendo games were concerned. The enclosed chip was powerful enough to push out flat-shaded polygons and render them reasonably quickly. The result was on-rails shooter that featured enough of a 3D environment to make gamers feel like they were actually flying through space.

At the heart of Star Fox was a gameplay style borrowed from games like Space Harrier and Afterburner. However, in classic Nintendo style, Star Fox put a new spin on a tired genre with interesting but simple gameplay innovations.

As opposed to most on-rails shooters, Star Fox allowed the player to temporarily speed up and slow down their aircraft instead of continuing at a constant speed. This came in handy when maneuvering around enemy attacks as well as other obstacles.

Star Fox’s difficulty levels also strayed away from the norm. Instead of typical difficulty levels (ones that simply decide the number of lives a player has, the speed of enemies, etc), Star Fox gives players a choice of one of three routes to take. Each of these routes correspond with a certain level of difficulty, but they also have their own series of unique levels. This gives Star Fox somewhat more replay value and depth when compared to earlier shooters.

Nintendo’s strength in developing charming characters also shone through in Star Fox in order to add personality to an otherwise faceless game. Our hero, Fox McCloud is joined by three computer-controlled wingmen: Peppy, Slippy, and Falco. Keeping your buddies alive (they often need to be bailed out), will help you keep your game score up and will keep you entertained with their presence.
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Super Metroid

Super Metroid ScreenshotThe NES was one of the first systems powerful enough to create somewhat free-form levels for platforming action games. The original Metroid was one of the first and best in this regard. You had a world to explore, and what limitations there were, could be overcome by finding power-ups that enhanced your abilities. There were many opportunities to go places you probably weren’t ready for, and many people died a number of times before learning the optimal path.

Like the original, Super Metroid is a relatively free-form, open-ended platformer where you have a lot of latitude about where to go and what to do. Unlike the two Game Boy Advance sequels/prequels it doesn’t tell you where to go next. It’s up to you to explore the environment, explore your abilities and limitations, and figure out both where you can go and where you should go.

All the basic weapons and abilities from the original Metroid are back, as well as a few others like power bombs, dashing, and a grapple. Unlike the original Metroid, the environments are much more detailed and a bit more dynamic in addition to an improved (but simplistic) storyline. As opposed to the simplistic and surreal sensation in the original Metroid, Super Metroid’s environment is much earthier and solid. You know exactly what you are doing because there is story at the beginning and the end. The environments are also much more concrete and organic, meaning the world doesn’t mess with at your mind quite as much.

To put everything in perspective, the original Metroid can be likened to an art film by an early director. This director wants to try new things and push boundaries, but his equipment and resources are limited. Because of these limitations, he has to adopt strange and stark techniques to represent his ideas, making them even more abstract and artsy than perhaps originally imagined.

Super Metroid can be viewed as a later film by the same director, once he’s finally made it to Hollywood and can win bigger budgets and better equipment. He takes his older ideas and recreates them, only more realistically and with more precision. No longer are the ideas abstract. They are still artful and carefully crafted, but the director can now flesh out his world and his ideas without having to obscure them behind constraints. Later Metroid games resemble more the expensive blockbusters, but Super Metroid straddles that line between art and polish and does it quite well, and over time still holds up as a remarkable title in a treasured franchise.
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Super Mario Kart

Super Mario Kart ScreenshotBefore the 16-bit era, most racing games were pretty generic fare (some exceptions like RC Pro AM surfaced) with simple tracks where you just held down the acceleration button and dodged your opponents. Released in late 1992 for the SNES, Super Mario Kart set a precedent for all future games in the genre, but also single-handedly created (and perhaps perfected) the entire sub-genre of kart racing. It has spawned many imitators and clones, and has many sequels. Still, many people have found that nothing beats the original.

The player can choose from eight well-known Nintendo characters that race frantically around 20 tracks in their cute little go-karts. Along the way, they can pick up items, like banana peels and Koopa shells, which they then use to knock your opponents silly. Forget Mortal Kombat, as this game should have been the reason the ESRB was created. After all, I can’t tell if I prefer winning the race, or hitting the same person with a red shell over and over until they feel like choking me.

Indeed, this is a great game to play with friends. It’s fun to play against the computers, but the AI will seem a little dated since they all drive on the same path every race, but it was still better than most racers of the era. There is also a battle mode that has you freely roaming around a square map with one other person. Hit them three times before they do the same to you, and you win. No, nothing compares to inviting a bud to some “friendly” violence with Super Mario Kart.

There have been few games that provide as many hours of fun as Super Mario Kart. It offered fast and challenging single-player gaming in addition to furious competitive play thanks to the tight skill-based system of driving that let the real masters show their stuff. While the other games in the series have their own appeal, they simply don’t have courses as tight, fast, and perfect as the original Kart masterpiece.
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Super Mario World 2: Yoshi’s Island

Yoshis Island ScreenshotAfter the megaton that was Donkey Kong Country hit the SNES Nintendo fans (and employees) where crazy to see Mario in the same form of 3D sprite base goodness. Mario creator Shigeru Miyamoto didn’t really like DKC and instead decided to take the next Mario game into a very different direction. The result was a rough crayon drawing style that resembles pictures out of children’s books. The game also took advantage of many of the SNES’ graphical niceties such as the Super-FX chip and parallax scrolling. This art direction combined with the graphical prowess of the SNES gave this game a magical feel which is still awe-inspiring to this day.

Yoshi’s Island was different to the NES Mario trilogy as it took the exploration factors from Super Mario World and enhanced them greatly. Each level now had a list of items that could be collected to get a high score.

The other big difference in Yoshi’s Island is that you don’t actually play as Mario, but instead you play as Yoshi. Yoshi plays somewhat like a cross between Kirby and Mario, as he can lick up objects, spit them out or digest them to create an egg. Yoshi can also fire these eggs, ground pound and flutter in the air for a limited amount of time.

Yoshi’s Island was not as commercially important as Donkey Kong Country, but very significant in terms of design. This game is full of creative energy and character that has shown the way for similar stylistic games. Yoshi’s Island’s step outside of the normally-expected realistic graphic design opened doors for games like Paper Mario, Jet Set Radio and Okami. It brought new elements to the Mario series and properly birthed Yoshi as his own stand alone character.
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Super Mario All-Stars

Super Mario All-Stars ScreenshotNintendo really knew how to please fans with the pack-in games back in the day. Not only was Super Mario All-Stars one of the most fun-filled pack-ins of all time, but it is one of the most treasured game compilations and remakes ever.

For those unfamiliar with this treasure-trove of Mario goodness, Super Mario All-Stars included all the original Super Mario Bros games remixed with a colorful style that accentuated the games’ colorful world with graphics that take advantage of the Super Nintendo’s 16-but power (a similar style to Super Mario World).

In addition to Super Mario Bros 1, 2, & 3, those outside of Japan were also treated to a game label The Lost Levels. This curious Mario installment was actually the Japanese version of Super Mario Bros 2.

The design of the game is very similar to the original Super Mario Bros., but the difficulty level was increased significantly (see my review of The Lost Levels to see how), and because of this, was not released outside of Japan. (See Wikipedia for more details on this topic)
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F-Zero

F-Zero SNES ScreenshotThe Japanese have a habit of using the number zero to either indicate a prequel or a far future sequel. In this case, Nintendo’s F-Zero is the futuristic progeny of what we know as F1 racing filled with more speed than we could otherwise fathom. F-Zero was a groundbreaking racing game that showed off the SNES’s Mode 7 capabilities (using 2D graphics power to create 3D effects) while providing a blistering-fast futuristic racing experience.

F-Zero featured a selection of four cars with drastically different top speeds, acceleration, durability, and handling. The four cars are distinct and drive very differently. Unlike modern racing games where you continually upgrade one of 15 billion different cars, F-Zero is all about picking the one car out of the four that suits you best and mastering it. You don’t improve the car to tackle the harder tracks. You improve yourself.

Gamers had the opportunity to race on 15 different tracks, divided up across 3 leagues: Knight, Queen, and King. Many of the tracks are alternate paths of the same locale but all end up having a significantly different feel. The tracks are littered with hazards like jumps over pits, mines, and magnets. These obstacles add to the strategy and challenge as you can only take so much damage before your vehicle explodes. In fact, the barrier on most tracks that keeps you from falling off (yes, on some tracks you can fall off) slows you down quite a bit and damages you.

If you are an aggressive player, F-Zero can almost feel like a destruction derby since you can knock your CPU opponents into hazards and even off the track. Who needs weapons when you can drive like a maniac? Still, aggressively hounding your opponents is often not as effective as simply mastering the cars and the tracks. And as soon as you’ve got everything figured out, up the difficulty level a notch and watch as the improved opponent AI crushes you at the track.
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Final Fantasy II & III (IV & VI in Japan)

Final Fantasy III ScreenshotSquare’s original Final Fantasy game on the NES may have been a last-ditch effort to keep the company alive, but it consequently introduced a great number of young, American gamers to the RPG genre. After the moderate success on the NES, Square reaped the benefits of bringing the series to the SNES, and in turn, ramped up one of the most successful game franchises of all time.

Final Fantasy II (known as Final Fantasy IV in Japan) was one of the first 16-bit RPGs, displaying state-of-the-art music and cutting-edge Mode 7 graphics. The story took gamers across three separate worlds with a slew of characters. FFII was also the first Final Fantasy to set love as a plot focus, popularized by later titles such as Final Fantasy VIII.

FFII’s battle system is is a bit different as it is the first to use Square’s infamous ATB (Active Time Battle) system. With this system, there are no turns to take, but you can attack while your foes are still deciding on what to do, and vice versa. This system was a bit innovative, but was not very intuitive, resulting in a mixed reception. Final Fantasy II’s battles did occasionally feature “Battlescripting” which were bits of dialogue or scripted events that were used as plot devices. This did help round out the dramatic elements in the game and brought the series closer to the cinematic experience that Final Fantasy fans have come to expect.

By the time Final Fantasy III (known as part VI in Japan) showed up the scene, the series had literally picked up steam. In this installment, the Final Fantasy world has decided to do away with magic and is now based on steam power and other technologies from the Second Industrial Revolution. The structure of society takes a cue from the latter half of the 19th century, with opera and the fine arts serving as recurring motifs throughout the game. This setting served as an interesting contrast to the fantasy medieval themes of most RPGs.

At the time of its release, Final Fantasy III boasted unprecedented graphics and sound helping it become one of the first truly epic stories in the history of video games. All these technical capabilities required a then-impressive 24-meg cartridge, making it one of the biggest RPGs up to that point in time.

Final Fantasy III is largely considered the best game of the series, as well as the one of the best console role playing games ever made.
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Chrono Trigger

Chrono Trigger ScreenshotWhile it might not bear the names of Final Fantasy or Dragon Quest, Chrono Trigger did have the a number of the people behind these popular franchises working on its development. Nearly every aspect of the game — character design, music, and overall direction — was put together by the greatest minds of Square and Enix’s powerhouses.

The resulting masterpiece is now regarded as possibly the greatest console RPG of all time. It has all the requirements of a great Japanese RPG — time travel, an innovative battle system, a brilliant soundtrack, and a surprisingly high amount of replay value. Add that to the amazing color and detail that is rarely achieved on the Super Nintendo, and you have a title that will be treasured for many more years to come.

The game was released in August of 1995, very late in the Super Nintendo’s life, and showed many signs of the genre’s evolution, such as multi-character combo attacks and multiple endings. The game starts out in 1000 AD, but due to a teleportation mishap you travel to multiple eras and pick up most of your playable characters along the way. This lends itself to many varied locales and characters and the game does not fail in this regard.

The graphics are among the best on the system with character designs by Akira Toriyama, character designer for Dragonball and the Dragon Quest games. Music is by Yasunori Mitsuda (Xenogears/Shadow Hearts) and Nobuo Uematsu (Final Fantasy) and much of it is very memorable and takes full advantage of the SNES synthesizer.

The game is relatively short and a bit easy but the fun factor more than makes up for these shortcomings. The battle system is familiar enough to let you jump right in but different enough to keep you interested. The plot is neither as simple and hackneyed as many early RPGs nor as convoluted and melodramatic as many recent RPGs.
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Super Mario RPG: Legend of the Seven Stars

Super Mario RPG ScreenshotIt isn’t too often that software powerhouses like Nintendo and Square team up, but when they do, magical things can happen. Super Mario RPG is one such gem that was primarily developed by Squaresoft, but had direct guidance from Mario’s creator, Shigeru Miyamoto. Super Mario RPG served as the final Mario game for the SNES, as well as being one of the last games Square produced before they took a 6 year break from Nintendo hardware.

Because of it’s role playing nature Super Mario RPG has a unique storyline that stays true to the Mario series’ roots while having that touch of Square that has you on the edge of your seat. The characters you interact with are quite comical, all of them have their own unique personalities whether it be cowardly or logical. The playful atmosphere really gave Mario fanboys and in-depth look at what goes on in the Mushroom Kingdom.

The battles throughout Super Mario RPG are a blend of platforming elements and traditional RPG battles. As well as selecting attacks, the player is usually required to perform action commands to increase the damage done. These consist of timed button presses and other movements to determine the power of the character’s attack, a concept that was carried over to some later RPGs including the Paper Mario series.

Graphically speaking, Super Mario RPG is very advanced for the system it is on, using Mode 7 SMRPG is able to express a true 3D like nature. You are able to move freely around in circles, jump in different directions, etc. Even the backgrounds are rendered with 3D polygons as opposed to sprites. The 3D nature of the game is what really makes it different from the other 2D RPGs that were released around this time on the SNES.
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Earthbound

Earthbound ScreenshotThere is no doubt that the SNES has one of the best RPG libraries and surprisingly, its isn’t completely dependent on Squaresoft for its role-playing selection. In fact, one of the most treasured RPGs of all time is actually developed by HAL Laboratories, who up to that point was only known for the Kirby series.

Earthbound is an odd little enigma. It’s probably one of the simplest RPGs you’ll ever play, both in terms of graphics and in gameplay, yet somehow it demands the utmost respect. Earthbound is clearly the product of some kind of natural or drug-induced chemical imbalance in someone’s brain. Luckily, this particular trip is the kind that you can share with others and put down any time you want.

In Earthbound, you play a young boy by the name of Ness and his friends as they challenge Giygas, an evil alien force destined to become too powerful to be contained. Earthbound pays careful attention to the modern setting (which attracts gamers like me that shy away from typical fantasy settings) and the fact that the main character, Ness, is still a child.

Enemies range from New-Age Retro Hippies and Trick-or-Treat Kids to Abstract Art and Bionic Kraken. Against these fiends you will wield deadly weapons such as baseball bats and frying pans. When you return to Ness’s home, your mother feeds you and your friends and allows you to sleep the night. The money you collect from enemies is deposited in your bank account by your father and can be withdrawn at ATMs in most towns.

The graphics are plain. The music is plain. The sound effects are relatively plain. But gosh darnit, if everything in this game isn’t so weird and trippy. The story and atmosphere are what really make the experience. A rudimentary RPG mechanic like the one found here will only get you so far unless you have that little extra something. Earthbound has that little extra something in rather large quantities.
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Super Punch Out

Super Punch-Out ScreenshotMike Tyson’s Punch-Out was one of my favorite reasons to boot up an NES when I was a kid. It had a straightforward gameplay mechanic but its uniquely stereotypical characters and increasing difficulty made for a strangely compelling formula.

Nintendo hoped to translate this success to their 16-bit powerhouse and bring a style that was similar to their Punch-Out and Super Punch-Out arcade games. In addition to the bigger, more cartoon-like character sprites, the game brought in a number of fresh characters to add to a select few from previous console and arcade installments.

Like the previous titles in the Punch-Out!! series, Super Punch-Out!! requires good timing and pattern recognition skills to react to the attacks of each opponent. As the player proceeds through the game’s circuits, the opponents become more difficult to react to and defeat.

Even though Super Punch-Out is a lot of fun, it didn’t quite hit the same nerve as Mike Tyson’s Punch-Out on the NES. The new characters didn’t seem to be quite as interesting, the game gave you more obvious hints as to when special attacks were coming, and Mac’s trainer, Doc, is gone all together. All this explains why Super Punch-Out wasn’t quite as a cultural phenomenon in the gaming world as its NES sibling, but it was still a treasured piece of the SNES library.
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Mega Man X

Megaman X ScreenshotDeveloped by Capcom as a slightly more complex companion to its hit NES franchise, the Megaman X brand added a more modern and mature spin on what was an already familiar franchise. The storyline takes place a bit in the future and also includes a more involving and edgy storyline in comparison to its predecessors.

In addition to the more mature setting of Mega Man X, the franchise has also prided itself on its upgradeable characters and multiple hero selections. Whereas the traditional Mega Man line has always been about a little robot and his ability to assimilate the powers of his fallen adversaries, Mega Man X raised the stakes by including things like additional suits of armor, health extensions, time-based gameplay, and randomized maps. These changes not only gave established Blue Bomber fans a change of pace, but it also helped bring in new enthusiasts into the fold.

Even thought the basic gameplay mechanics are very similar to the original series, there are a few mechanical changes such as Mega Man’s ability to cling to walls and can pull off a nifty air-dash maneuver. However in Megaman X, you still travel through a number of selectable stages, fighting crazy evil robots, eventually battling the boss robot in an attempt to steal the boss’s unique weapon for your own personal use after you defeat them.

With the overwhelming success of Megaman X, the sub-series enjoyed two more iterations on the SNES before having many more installments and spin-offs on the PS1, Saturn, and PS2.
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Killer Instinct

Killer Instinct ScreenshotStreet Fighter II set the gaming industry on fire and consequently filled both the arcades and consoles with a flood of other me-too fighters, each with their own little gimmick. Nintendo also wanted to get in on the action, so it teamed up with Rareware to make a fighter that stood out from the crowd. Of course, to give Killer Instinct a cutting-edge look, it used the same pre-rendered 3D graphics technique that it used for Donkey Kong Country.

The game’s campy gore and finishing moves are reminiscent of the Mortal Kombat games, while mechanics of the game feel more like Street Fighter II. The imaginative character designs, however, are very unique to KI.

The game also featured a few novelties for the time, such as the double health bar, automatic combos, and combo breakers. Some of these concepts have gone on to become quite common in fighting games.

A decade later, Killer Instinct doesn’t quite hold up as well as some other classics from Capcom or SNK, but Killer Instinct still has a soft spot in hearts of many nostalgic Nintendo fans.
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Pilotwings

Pilotwings ScreenshotPilotwings is essentially a tech demo of the scaling and rotation features of the Super Nintendo, yet it somehow rises above this fact and is truly more than the sum of its parts.

In Pilotwings you are a student, training to earn various licenses in order to fly. You earn points by completing various tests, and if you’ve earned enough points you advance to the next lesson and chance at the next license. You start Pilotwings with a light plane, but as you progress through each lesson, you gain more responsibility and earn the ability to fly more complicated and exciting aircrafts such as a helicopter.

Overall, Pilotwings handles very well, and though initial adjustment may be difficult, the game constantly spurs you on. Every failure has you thinking “next time I’ll do better!” Every run-through adds to your experience so that your next attempt will be improved over the last.

While Pilotwings isn’t necessarily the most visually stunning game on the SNES, this classic did show off some technical prowess in order to give a more realistic experience. Pilotwings uses an additional DSP chip in the cartridge, similar to the ones in games like Super Mario Kart. So not only was Pilotwings an early showpiece of the SNES’s capabilities but it’s a heck of a lot of fun, too, and it will keep you coming back for just one more try.
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Uniracers

Uniracers ScreenshotAlthough Mario and pals had changed the way we expected to play racing games two years prior, this did not stop DMA Designs, (later renaming to RockStar North) from introducing this unique and clever 2D racer. The concept of Uniracers (or Unirally for those in PAL territories) is simple: race your unicycle along a candy cane bar track to get to the finish line before a rival cycle.

The track designs in Uniracers are made somewhat like a roller-coaster. That is you have large accents and rapid descents which lead off to huge ramps. The large ramps throw your unicycle into the air which gives you a limited time to pull off as many tricks as you can for a speed boost. Despite only being able to rotate, flip and twist your unicycle, the skill came from getting the most out of every jump. There is also a risk involved in performing tricks as if you crash and wipe out you lose all of your speed. So mastering the tricks is essential for beating the computer players later on in the game. (Keep in mind this game was years ahead of titles such as Tony Hawk and SSX).

The track designs also borrow a few ideas from other games, such as loops (from Sonic the Hedgehog) and boost pads (from F-zero). It would always be a wise idea to understand a track’s layout before you race for competition as the tracks are never predictable and could throw you in any direction at any time.

As if the single-player mode wasn’t engaging enough, the two-player mode allowed horizontal split screen action between friends. There was even a tournament mode which allowed eight players to join and battle it out with 1-on-1 races. Players had all of the options that the single player GP had, but let you share the unique fun with others.
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Honorable Mentions:

  • Secret of Mana (eBay)
  • Super Castlevania IV (eBay)
  • Contra III (eBay)
  • Act Raiser (eBay)
  • Kirby Super Star (eBay)
  • Street Fighter II: Turbo (eBay)
  • Earthworm Jim (eBay)
  • Flashback/Out of This World (eBay)
  • Rock ‘n Roll Racing (eBay)
  • Shadowrun (eBay)
  • Super Smash TV (eBay)
  • SuperPuyoPuyo / Kirby’s Avalanche (eBay)
  • Terranigma (eBay)
  • Tetris Attack (eBay)
  • Kirby’s Dream Course (eBay)
  • Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles IV: Turtles in Time (eBay)
  • Gradius III (eBay)
  • Megaman 7 (eBay)
  • Super Star Wars Series (eBay)
  • Dragon Warrior Series (eBay)

Related Links

Hidden SNES GemsCheapest SNES Games

A Special Thanks

I would like to give a special thanks to Daniel Primed, marurun, and a handful of other racketboy.com contributers for helping me put this feature together. They helped my write a number of the game entries in order to provide various perspectives and an adequate picture of what the Super Nintendo meant to all of us.


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126 Comments

indyrob says:

How did you forget super bomberman? I spent months and months playing this game with buddies.

racketboy says:

I didn’t forget about it, but Bomberman is like on every console ever made. It didn’t exactly “define” the SNES.

Marino Laro says:

Hey where the hell is Street Fighter 2? 😛

Hattori says:

Nice read ; but should disagree

take out pilotwings,punch out and killer instict , also uniracers

and add

Clock Tower
Kirby Superstar
Tales of Phantasia
Street Fighter 2 Turbo

Cultivated says:

Seiken Densetsu 3 – BEST GAME hands down. It was never released in the U.S. but there’s a translated version on the internet. You HAVE to download ZSNES emulator and play the Seiken Densetsu 3 translated version…seriously you haven’t played an RPG without this…It’s like…a multiplayer RPG with some aspects of Secret of Mana but SOOOOOO much better!

William says:

I’m having a bit of a dilemma. Today I received Super Mario World 2: Yoshi’s Island in the mail; it was an ebay purchase. There is a slight problem at the file selection screen; the screen appears to be spliced into a kind of grid, but the big problem arises in level 1-3; after I activate the help block by slamming my head into it, the entire upper portion of the screen turns into, as best I can describe, a solid column of bent, gray pipes. What makes this incredible is that this is NOT the first time that this has happened. In fact, this is the THIRD copy I’ve purchased on ebay that has reacted the exact same way. All my other SNES games work without any problems. My two-part question is thus: why do these cartridges react this way, and where can I buy a copy of Super Mario World 2 that is in working order? I’d appreciate if ANYONE could solve this mystery. Thanks.

racketboy says:

Wish I could help — but this is the type of question that would be better asked in the forum so more people can view it….

William says:

To be honest, I never considered the possibility of you not knowing the solution. It’s good to know you’re mortal like the rest of us.

breakwind says:

What about Mario Paint?Granted,it’s not an action-oriented video game like those mentioned in other posts,nonetheless,it gave non-artistic/musically incline video gamers an ideal how games can look and sound on the 16-bit console.

Ziggy587 says:

Mario Paint was one of SNES’s biggest deals. There hasn’t been a game like that since! Also, I think Mega Man X and Mega Man 7 should switch places. I liked X1 a lot, but I think 7 blows it out of the water.

@ Sonic 2 > Mario World comment a while back, I don’t know about that one. Maybe because Super Mario World was the first game I played for SNES, but in all respects, I think it’s better then Sonic 2. First off, there’s way more game there. Almost seems like the game is endless the first time through, with all the secret/hidden levels. You can beat that game with out touching 50% of it! Sonic 2, there’s no save function. You have to play the whole game in one sitting to beat it, and then thats IT. When you turn it on again, you have to start all over again. Then you end up playing the same first 5 or 6 zones over and over and over again.

Not to say that Sonic 2 isn’t a great game, I love that game. I would just have to say Mario World is just a tad bit better.

Jon says:

Terranigma, a game so nice you listed it twice. 😉
I had some good times with Krusty’s Super Funhouse… just wish it would let you “save” more often between rooms. The Inspector Gadget game was pretty good too IMO.

Alex (PresidentLeever) says:

I think this is a good list overall, better than the Genesis one. But I have to agree with everyone else about putting on street Fighter instead of KI, because it came out like over a year before the Genesis version and I kept visiting friends just to play it since we didn’t have a snes at the time.. and when it did go multi-platform the snes versions were still the best. Also, consider replacing Pilotwings and Uniracers, I never played or read about those nor did I hear anyone saying they liked them. Plus they aren’t that great compared to some titles in the honourable mentions. Two games that seemed very popular though are Castlevania IV and Turtles in Time. Long running franchise games that were highly anticipated and they both delivered. When I think snes those two instantly come to mind, so I’d put those on there instead.

Franco says:

Genesis does…..

Mrevilbobguy says:

I guess Terranigma was so good that it needed to be mentioned twice! (Honorable mentions)

Doomed Saint says:

Terranigma was one of those games that made you think most if not all of these games are great of course I was born in 92 so to get most of these great games I emulate but there is no replacement for the origional

Jeff says:

LOVE this website! Found the link in a Game Informer Magazine.
Your lists are making me want to go out and buy some older gems!

Question for you?

Do you have an article on buying the old systems?
What systems do you rank as worth buying and what price can one find the old systems for? Nintendo, Sega Genesis, etc.
Would very much love to read an article on the collecting ot the units themselves and where and how much we can buy them for.

Thanks!

Jeff

racketboy says:

Thanks! Glad to hear that you not only saw the site in GI, but you enjoyed it 🙂

I don’t have a guide like that just yet, but I do have plans for one. Not sure when, but it should be by year end if all goes well 🙂

See you around!

nash says:

you forgot to mention “Donkey Kong Country 2” which is the best competitor for Yoshi’s Island

jimmycolorado says:

Fun list, but like many, many others have said, the omission of Street Fighter II from this list is horrifying. It was a seminal event of the 16-bit era, similar to “Mortal Monday” (September 13, 1993), which as this list portends to describe, helped define the SNES’ place in the history of video games, as well as the winners and losers of this era’s console wars.

To argue that Street Fighter II doesn’t belong “because it was on other systems” lacks total and complete merit, considering that the list includes games like Earthworm Jim, Out of this World (Another World), Shadowrun and Smash TV which were also multi-console.

In that respect, I’d also nominate Mortal Kombat; not necessarily because the SNES port of the game was groundbreaking, but rather because the Genesis port was an abortion. You can roll up all the games on this list and weigh them against the Genesis port of Mortal Kombat, and you would have trouble arguing which did more damage to the Genesis’ cause!

Again, fun list, great discussion from all (except the haters), and keep up the good work.

jimmycolorado says:

Also, an opportunity to be real:

“The numerous home versions of Street Fighter II are listed among Capcom’s Platinum-class titles (games which have sold more than 1 million units worldwide). As of June 30, 2008, the SNES version of the original Street Fighter II is still the company’s best-selling game, having sold more than 6.3 million units, followed by the SNES versions of Street Fighter II Turbo (4.1 million) and Super Street Fighter II (2 million).”

In comparison:

“The Legend of Zelda: A Link to the Past is one of the best-selling SNES games, with 4.61 million units sold worldwide.”

“At the time of its release, Super Metroid was universally praised. To this day, it remains one of the most popular and critically lauded games not only for the SNES, but in all of gaming history. It has sold 1.4 million units (780,000 in Japan and 460,000 in North America), becoming a Player’s Choice.”

“Donkey Kong Country was very successful on release, eventually selling 8 million copies.” (Note: the game was later included as a pack-in game with the SNES itself, which helps explain the astronomical number of units sold.)

What more is there to say? The people have spoken: the SNES port of Street Fighter II is right up there with the best of the best of the best games the console had to offer in the entirety of it’s history. If that isn’t the definition of “defining”, then we’re all going to need new dictionaries.

Stop me if I’m being too real for you. 😉

pixelking says:

As always with Racketboy nothing but the best, the only one i’d add to honorable mentions would be the firemen, as far as I know it only got a uk and jap release, but I love it, one of my favorites…… Along with all the others mentioned here!

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