The Games That Pushed The Limits Of The NES

Thinking back to most of the games you played on the NES, it’s easy to remember the 8-bit library as being simple and possibly even primitive. However, if you dig deep into the library, there is a surprising amount of games that maxed out the NES hardware to produce some impressive graphics and sound (See the rest of our Games That Pushed The Limits series). With the Famicom / NES hardware remaining popular and active on the retail scene for over a decade, game developers had a lot of time to perfect their programming techniques and squeeze every last bit of power out of the iconic console. Below, RadarScope1 and racketboy team up to review some of the most demanding NES games in terms of hardware resources

Kirby’s Adventure

Release Date: 1993
See Game In Action

Key Technical Features:

  • Amazing use of color
  • Smooth animation
  • Largest licensed NES game at 6 Mbit

What Makes The Game Special:
Kirby was another one of those games that came out for the NES as many Nintendo fans already had started building their SNES libraries. It’s a cute and fun-filled game that, like Super Mario Bros 3, looked like an early SNES game with a smaller color palette. Kirby had an advantage on Mario 3, however, as it was the largest licensed NES cart at 6 Mbit (and it shows).

Rather than make some piece of trash as the last great NES game, the makers polished it and polished it until you can almost see your face in it. The graphics stretch the 8-bit format to its absolute limit. It is the aesthetic equivalent of painting the Lord’s Prayer on a grain of rice – the beauty is that of working within the limitations.

Kirby himself is a beautiful vibrant pink, the worlds he passes through are delicious lime greens, ice blues, chocolate browns – the rich colors do not attempt to emulate 16 bit, but instead try to make 8 bit as beautiful as possible. The attention to detail incredible as Kirby’s character animations are about as good as they get on the NES.

The backgrounds’ graphics may be The biggest strength of the game. In relation to most other NES games, the backgrounds in Kirby’s Adventure are superb. There’s one level that takes place in a forest and you can see an ocean in the distance. There is also some nifty parallax scrolling in the tower stages of the game. If all that wasn’t enough, the game has smooth animation as well. Even the intros to each level were nifty. All these little elements come together to create one “dreamy” gaming experience.

Battletoads

Release Date: 1991
See Game In Action

Key Technical Features:

  • Large sprites with impressive animations
  • Scrolling and rotating backgrounds
  • Large number of levels
  • Creative use of graphical techniques to create 16-bit-like experience

What Makes The Game Special:
This innovative beatemup from Rare was one of the most impressive games on the NES. Clearly ripping off the Ninja Turtles craze and mashing it up with the game play of Double Dragon, Battletoads did introduce some fresh gameplay mechanics, including vertical scrolling stages that featured cylindrical backgrounds rotating in pseudo-3D. The hover bike sequences are some of the fastest (and most frustrating) bits of game play the NES ever saw.

The originality of each Battletoads stage (I believe there were around 12 back in the day when 8 was considered huge) made you believe it was a 16 bit game all the way. From descending deep chasms on a rope to going at the speed of light on racer bikes to climbing on the backs of snakes to a literal rat race to climbing a giant tower that tracks in 3D as you walk around it, this game was and still is amazing.

Another characteristic that made BattleToads memorable was its stylized look and exaggerated ways of finishing off enemies. These include a headbutt that would have the battletoad sprout ram’s horns or a football helmet, a punch with an extremely enlarged fist, and on climbing/falling levels, the ability to transform into a boulder and act as a wrecking ball. Each of these effects showed off some graphical techniques that had never really been explored by anyone else.

It is also worth nothing that a follow-up, Battletoads & Double Dragon, was released two years later in 1993, but I don’t think it really even reaches the level of the original in terms of graphics. (Perhaps the developers were too busy with the 16-bit ports)

Crisis Force

Release Date: 1991
See Game in Action

Key Technical Features:

  • Insane amount of action and movement on the screen
  • Parallax scrolling galore
  • Great sprite animation effect include pseudo 3D rotations
  • Huge boss battles
  • Nice cinematic screen animations

What Makes The Game Special:
If you think the TurboGrafx-16 was the only 8-bit machine that could have fun with shmups, you need to take a look at Crisis Force. This classic has often been called “the Axelay of the Famicom”, and has the graphical muscle to back the claim up.

Konami pulled out all the stops with graphics that are almost at a 16-bit level in terms of multiple-scrolling backgrounds and large sprites. The first time I saw it in action, I was shocked… I’d never seen a Famicom/NES pull off those kinds of tricks. Some of the parallax and other effects are truly on the level of a Genesis shooter.

Recca Summer Carnival ‘92

Release Date: 1992
See Game in Action

Key Technical Features:

  • Jaw-dropping fast gameplay
  • Tons of simultaneous on-screen action
  • Some trippy background effects
  • Great sound with 4 channels of 8-bit sampled loops

What Makes The Game Special:
This shmup is insane. It isn’t very often than I see a game fling sprites around as quickly as Recca. This Japan-only Famicom game

The actual game sprites are pretty basic, but some of the backgrounds and bosses are quite colorful. There are other levels that have some trippy graphical effects going on to wow onlookers and make your eyes go even crazier while trying to dodge bullets.

Further completing the technical powerhouse, Recca also uses 4 channels of 8-bit sampled sound loops to deliver some audio that is rarely achieved on the Famicom/NES. Its trance/techno-style soundtrack is cutting edge for the early 90’s an fits right in with the action.

Metal Storm

Release Date: 1991
See Game in Action

Key Technical Features:

  • Smooth and stylistic animations
  • Realistic gravity effects
  • Multi-layers backgrounds
  • Lots of parallax scrolling without slowdown

What Makes The Game Special:
Before you write this game off because of the screenshots, let me assure you that you need to see Metal Storm in action to appreciate its graphical prowess. A single frame of the mech sprite isn’t overly impressive, but one you see it walking around and engaging in combat, it’s really quite impressive.

Irem, the developers behind R-Type, pieced together this mech-based run-n-gun that I looks like an early version of the Assault Suit Leynos series in terms of both gameplay and graphics.

One of the coolest little gimmicks of Metal Storm is your little mech’s ability to play with gravity in order to walk upside on ceilings. This is very similar to certain levels in Megaman and Gunstar Heroes, but Metal Storm pulled it off years before them and animated changes in gravity more realistically than any 8-bit game I have seen.

I know this is a small detail, but the anime-inspired explosion animations on Metal Storm rival some of the coolest of the 16-bit generation. There are also two different layers of backgrounds, as well as the foreground, which gives a nice perspective view as you move along. It wasn’t until the SNES that layered backgrounds became common. There can be occasional flickering when many objects are on the screen at once. However this is rare and barely noticeable when it does occur, and there is no gameplay slowdown.

Batman: Return of the Joker

Release Date: 1991
See Game in Action

Key Technical Features:

  • Could pass for a 16-bit game
  • Large sprites and bosses
  • Excellent use of color
  • Fast and Fluid animation

What Makes The Game Special:
If you watch this game in action, but aren’t looking very closely at the density of the pixels, you would think Return of the Joker is an early Genesis game (there is a Genesis port, BTW)

Just by watching this final boss battle of the game, you can see that the developers at Sunsoft knew how to effectively use the NES’s limited color palate to create a dark, but engaging atmosphere. You can also see how quickly Batman can move around while there is a good deal of subtle animations going on.

Even the standard level gameplay looks like something would see in a 16-bit title. The way the enemies drop down and guns fire remind me a bit of Gunstar Heroes. Obviously, it doesn’t have some of the other graphical treats the Gunstar does, but for an NES title, some of the effects are stunning.

Gradius & Gradius II

Release Date: 1986 and 1988 respectively
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Key Technical Features:

  • Large sprite count due to plenty of enemies and bullets on the screen
  • Minimal amount of slowdown and flicker
  • Detailed graphics from excellent arcade port

What Makes The Game Special:
The NES saw plenty of arcade ports of varying quality throughout its lifespan. Few of those titles pushed the hardware like Konami’s Gradius, and the Japan-only Gradius II.

The archetypal horizontal shooter put a slew of enemies and dozens of bullets on screen at once. Most impressively, Konami’s programmers did it all with only a minimal amount of slowdown or flicker in an era when such chugging and flashing was almost expected. The graphics are detailed enough to put the port of the original game on par with its arcade counterpart and the music, though fairly repetitive, is suitably epic for a space shooter. All this from a title released relatively early in the console’s lifespan. For a truly mind-blowing experience, check out videos of the sequel, Gradius II.

Contra

Release Date: 1988
See Game in Action

Key Technical Features:

  • Minimal amount of slowdown despite heavy shooting action
  • Lots of explosion animations
  • Pseudo 3D stages with large number of bullets
  • Huge boss battles
  • Scrolling maps and cutscenses between levels in Famicom version

What Makes The Game Special:
Another Konami title, Contra is notable for being an exception to the norms of the day in that many then (and now) regarded the NES version superior to the arcade title it on which it was based.

The run-and-gun gameplay is fast-paced and is rarely hampered by slowdown – though flicker is a problem. Explosions abound, giving the title the feel of macho actions flicks of the ’80s. The perspective shifts with each of the eight stages, from horizontal scrolling to vertical and back, and in between gamers were treated to pseudo-3D corridor stages where bullets and grenades were poured on in thick waves.

The soundtrack rocks as hard as the action, ranging from driving anthems to slightly more atmospheric tunes. The huge bosses are of special note. Perhaps best of all, two players could tackle everything Contra threw at them at the same time.

Journey to Silius

Release Date: 1990
See Game in Action

Key Technical Features:

  • Detailed and smooth character animations
  • Screen-filling bosses
  • Detailed backgrounds and environments
  • Unique audio techniques combined with killer soundtrack

What Makes The Game Special:
On a number of occasions, Sunsoft has proven themselves to be one of the most skilled developers for the NES. Journey to Silius is one of Sunsofts finest products in the era due to its well-rounded graphics, audio, and gameplay. The game obviously draws some inspirations for classics such as Megaman and Contra, but it improves on some things to create an experience that is more modern than your typical NES title.

The main character animation is impressive, especially when running and jumping. There is also some decent momentum-based jumping physics in place to add to the realism (and challenge). The bosses are also impressively large, colorful, and well-detailed. The game’s backgrounds are nothing short of beautiful. They portray the environment of a bleak, apocalyptic future with vibrant colors and detail. (The game was originally anticipated to use the Terminator license) For example, in the second level’s underground tunnel, the scene is strongly detailed, right down to the little glowing red lights that line the walls.

There aren’t a lot of NES games that impress me with the musical abilities, but Journey to Silius is one of the few exceptions. One of its unique aspects is that rather than use the Digital channel for the kick or snare (as was usually done), they use the Digital channel for a simple sampled bassline. And then the kick drum uses the Triangle channel which gives it a very different tone. The game’s audio isn’t only extraordinary on a technical level, but it also has one of the best game soundtracks of the decade.

Castlevania III: Dracula’s Curse

Release Date: 1990
See Game in Action

Key Technical Features:

  • Heavy doses of rotation effects and parallax faking
  • Detailed background and foreground elements
  • Additional sound channels via Konami’s VRC6 sound chip

What Makes The Game Special:
With the third installment of the NES Castlevanias, Konami packed a very large game into that small cartridge with a couple of custom mappers, which gave the NES very nice graphic effects, such as rotation and parallax faking. The graphics were also revamped and ended up being of the best on the NES. A very large amount of animated tiles in the backgrounds of movement stages fill the game with a haunting atmosphere. Some action stages have some surprises that add to the challenge, such as automatic scrolling, rising water, crumbling bridges, and falling towers.

Konami made the most of the graphical capabilities of the NES to provide intricate details such as stained-glass windows, moss on rocks, eerie swamp fog, ominous shadows, rotting wood, and spectacular lightning flashes. This is a definite step up from Castlevania 2 which often repeated backgrounds. The enemies and bosses look much better than they did in the previous Castlevania games (which were good to start with). The animation is one thing that is much improved, as many of characters now have more than just one or two frames.

The Famicom version, Akumajou Densetsu in Japan, used Konami’s VRC6 chip for additional sound channels. A couple other Konami games use that chip as well. (Only the Famicom supports the extra sound chip)

Blaster Master

Release Date: 1988
See Game in Action

Key Technical Features:

  • “Tiling” techniques to create impressive environments
  • Detailed explosions and animations
  • Large bosses

What Makes The Game Special:
This game was looked and sounded fantastic at the time of its 1988 release. 16-bit systems were just coming onto the market at the time, and maybe the best compliment that can be given to Master Blaster is that it almost looks like a 16-bit title. Little touches like enemy explosions are highly detailed, and the bosses at the end of the top-down stages are mammoth. The level of detail in the side-scrolling sections goes beyond most any other game of the 8-bit generation.

Developer Sunsoft made perhaps the best use of the “tile” method of creating environments of any game on the NES. Blaster Master felt like two games in one, thanks to its mixture of side-scrolling vehicle-platforming stages and the top-down areas that felt like Mega Man had just been dropped into a Zelda game. The music rocks, too, though it isn’t quite as earth-shattering as that of Mega Man series.

Crystalis

Release Date: 1990
See Game in Action

Key Technical Features:

  • Imaginative use of color
  • Detailed environments

What Makes The Game Special:
When you think of SNK, 2D fighters and Metal Slug games probably come to mind. However, you may be surprised to know that one of SNK’s first successes was actually an RPG for the NES that rivaled Zelda in terms of both gameplay and technical prowest.

Despite its quality, Crystalis never became a runaway hit, although it is considered today a cult classic among NES junkies. Even in these early days, you can see SNK’s skill for maxing out limited hardware to create colorful creations that were not only beautiful, but also had solid gameplay.

The sprites were clean and detailed considering they were relatively small to cater to its genre. However, the animation throughout your adventure is enough to make The Legend of Zelda look rather dated. In addition, the environments in Crystalis somehow feel a bit more organic as opposed the the blockiness you might otherwise expect from an NES game.

Little Samson

Release Date: 1991
See Game in Action

Key Technical Features:

  • Fluid character sprite animations
  • Amazingly detailed and colorful backgrounds

What Makes The Game Special:
This underrated little action shooter is a fun and frantic that has some graphical flair. Being a late-generation NES game, Little Samson is packed with clean and bright graphics and smooth animation. The actual sprites aren’t impressive on their own, but after seeing them in motion, you can see that the developer prioritized smoothness over detail.

The backgrounds, on the other hand, can be quite detailed and colorful. This more than makes up for the any sprites you might think are boring. Taito also manages keeps the frame rate and flicker under control, which is crucial for some of the frantic firefights.

Prince of Persia

Release Date: 1992
See Game in Action

Key Technical Features:

  • Very large sprites
  • Fluid animation
  • Detailed animated backgrounds

What Makes The Game Special:
Prince of Persia was a revolutionary game when it was originally released on the Apple II in 1989, but due to its realistic character animation, it was still a technical marvel when the NES port was released three years later.

The NES port looks very similar to the PC version, but some of the screens resort to a bit of scrolling, since they can’t fit entirely on the screen.  Nevertheless, it is still a thrill to see this classic running and looking so good on the good ‘ol NES.

Slalom

Release Date: 1987
See Game in Action

Key Technical Features:

  • First NES title to feature splitscreen action
  • Surprising sense of speed
  • Very smooth animation
  • An early attempt at a pseudo 3D experience

What Makes The Game Special:
The most cutting edge racing game ever to grace the NES took place on snow, not pavement. Slalom is another early-cycle title that pushed the console. It was published in 1987, and was the first Rare title published on Nintendo hardware, marking the beginning of a long and fruitful relationship. The snowy setting was key to the technical achievement. By placing a simple white strip between two gray areas on either side, Rare’s programmers were able to create incredibly smooth and speedy gameplay.

Toss in moguls, trees, flagpoles, snowmen, sledders and an unending onslaught of other skiers and you have a white-knuckle ride. Though it used essentially the same kind of programming as other pseudo-3D racers of the day, very few if any NES racers felt as fast as Slalom. This was also the first NES title to use a split-screen view for head-to-head two-player action, which is a distinction in and of itself.

3D World Runner

Release Date: 1988
See Game in Action

Key Technical Features:

  • Pseudo 3D experience that is better than the Famicom version of Space Harrier

What Makes The Game Special:
After seeing 3D World Runner in motion, Sega fans will notice a similarities to the Space Harrier games. The graphical style and technique is very similar, but in this game you don’t get to fly around — you just run. Nevertheless, the pseudo 3D effect is well executed considering its running on the NES hardware and was developed in 1987.

There’s also a 3D mode using normal red/blue 3D glasses, which technically beat Space Harrier 3D to the punch. Unfortunately, it’s just not a whole lot of fun.

Cosmic Epsilon

Release Date: 1989
See Game in Action

Key Technical Features:

  • Beat Space Harrier at its own game on the NES
  • Pseudo 3D  graphics with slick shooting action
  • Smooth animation
  • Nice animated cutscenes

What Makes The Game Special:
One year after 3D World Runner was released, Cosmic Epsilon raised the stakes by bring shooting action to complete the goal Space Harrier clone that is better than the NES Space Harrier Port.

The colors weren’t as interesting as 3D World Runner, nor were the environments as detailed, but at least you could shoot enemies and fly around — and you could do effectively and smoothly.  Cosmic Epsilon also added some animated cinemas to add to the polish.

Moon Crystal

Release Date: 1992
See Game in Action

Key Technical Features:

  • Detailed and smooth character animations
  • Impressive anime-styled intro sequence

What Makes The Game Special:
By 1992, the Super Nintendo was already over a year into it’s launch, but that didn’t stop some developers from creating games for the ever-popular NES. Of course, by then, most developers were very comfortable with the hardware and were able to squeeze every last bit of power to make them relevant when compared to newer 16-bit games.

Never released in the west, Moon Crystal is a side-scrolling platformer that’s notable for its main character’s silky smooth animation. It’s not on par with the rotoscoped animation of Prince of Persia, but it’s well beyond most 8-bit platformers. Moon Crystal also has an intro sequence featuring Japanese anime characters that looked more like something out of TG-16 title than an NES game. Granted, it was limited to some simple animation, but it is still impressive for the NES.

Super Mario Bros 3.

Release Date: 1988
See Game in Action

Key Technical Features:

  • Heavy use of color
  • Detailed sprites
  • Diagonal scrolling

What Makes The Game Special:
Released in 1988 (in Japan, 1989 in the U.S.), the third installment of the Nintendo’s generation-defining series likely went far beyond anything the Big N’s engineers thought possible on the hardware when they designed it. Bursting with color and imaginative settings, Mario 3 set the bar for platformers and games in general with its sheer depth and size. Just about every gamer was blown away by how groundbreaking SMB3 was when it was debuted. (Anyone remember watching The Wizard in 1989?)

There are dozens of playable levels spread across eight worlds that have their own distinct theme and style. While most side-scrolling games of the time scrolled only vertically or horizontally, Mario’s third adventure allowed him to fly and jump in every direction, including diagonally. For another comparison as to how far the NES had come by this time, consider this: the original Mario Bros., an arcade game that was given a full retail release at the NES’s 1983 Japanese launch, was included as a souped-up mini-game in Mario 3.

Thrilla’s Surfari

Release Date: 1992
See Game in Action

Key Technical Features: 

  • Some impressive physics
  • Vivid color and shading
  • Quick gameplay with lots of obstacles without slowdown
  • Exploding monkeys

What Makes The Game Special:
This is one rather bizarre game (what the opening cutscenes) that involves a gorilla that surfs and skates through a number of tricky situations.  The first thing that caught my eye about Thrilla’s Surfari was the fact that it looks like somebody tried cramming a Donkey Kong Country game into a NES cart (like those pirate releases of days gone by).   The developers apparently made good use of the NES’s available colors to create a vivid and well-animated experience.

The actual gameplay is also rather creative and impressive from a technical standpoint.  I naturally draw comparisons to one of the Gameboy Advance version of Tony Hawk fused with a traditional platforming game.  The physics and tricks Thrilla can pull off obviously aren’t on the same level as Tony Hawk’s, but considering the game’s vintage and it is a platformer, it is impressive.

For instance, depending on Thrilla’s speed and how he lands/crashes, he could have a simple fall or completely explode into pieces like a Mortal Kombat fatality.  Where was  Joe Lieberman when this was released?

Once the game progresses, it will require you to maneuver Thrilla at higher speeds.  On some of the later levels, the NES was sure to be sweating a bit, but it doesn’t seem to display any slowdown.

Solar Jetman

Release Date: 1990
See Game in Action

Key Technical Features:

  • Incredible gravity physics
  • Smooth animation enabling 3D-like rotations
  • Detailed cutscene animations

What Makes The Game Special:
The gameplay for Solar Jetman was old-school even for an old-school console, but its graphical techniques were still cutting edge, thanks to Zippo Games and Rare. This multi-directional shooter depends heavily on its impressive gravity physics, much like its predecessors, Thrust and Gravitar. As Wikipedia says so eloquently, “The player’s craft is subject to inertia but not drag, so to stop moving in one direction it needs to thrust in the opposite way. The constant pull of gravity makes stable flight impossible and steering a skill in itself.”

As if Solar Jetman’s physics engine was enough of a programming feat, the animations of our Jetman are quite nice as well. Even though the sprite designs are simple, they animate in a way that gives the illusion of rotating in 3D.

Lagrange Point

Release Date: 1991
See Game in Action

Key Technical Features:

  • Utilizes Konami’s VRC7 soundchip
  • Sound quality nearly on par with Sega Genesis games
  • Nice animated cutscenes

What Makes The Game Special:
This Japan-only Famicom title is an RPG from Konami. Since it isn’t a classic in terms of gameplay, it is primarily known for its unique audio capabilities. Lagrange Point is the only game to use Konami’s VRC7 soundchip, which gives it dramatically improved audio capabilities, roughly analogous to Sega Genesis. It is obviously quite impressive. Due to its release late in the 8-bit era and the use of the advanced chip, the game was never localized.

It is also worth mentioning that it has some detailed and animated cutscenes to set the story for this RPG.

Dragon’s Lair

Release Date: 1990
See Game in Action

Key Technical Features:

  • Very large sprites
  • Fluid animation
  • Detailed animated backgrounds

What Makes The Game Special:
Ok, so the gameplay of this NES port pretty much sucks, but you have to give the developers credit for making it look good.  (Pretty much the same concept of the arcade original).

Since the NES obviously couldn’t pull off the full motion video of the original game, huge sprites were used in an attempt to re-create the experience.  It didn’t really accomplish its mission, but it is still impressive for the NES hardware.  The jumping animation is pretty dorky-looking, but there are a number of frames of animation throughout the game to ensure some smooth movement.

Honorable Mentions

  • Ninja Gaiden Series – Fast and furious.  Cutscenes were also a sight to behold. (videos)
  • The Immortal – nice execution of isometric perspective technique (video)
  • Mighty Final Fight – Large sprites with brilliantly smooth and quick fighting animations (video)
  • Phantom Fighter – some relatively realistic walking and fighting animations
  • Nightshade – Good balance of colors, shading, and animation (video)
  • Wurm: Journey To The Center of the Earth – Interesting side-scrolling shooter that has some colorful environments and fast action (video)
  • Sword Master – has some impressive parallax scrolling and nice cinematic screens (video)
  • Dragon Warrior 4 (lengthy quest, multiple chapters) – 512KB. (video)
  • Baseball Stars – You could climb the wall and it animated right, dive, jump. (video)
  • Ikari III: The Rescue – A cool top-down action title from SNK that has detailed landscapes and cool battle animations (video)
  • Punch-Out – Big sprites bursting with color and character (video)
  • After Burner – Rivals the Sega Master System version, but choppier and not quite and pleasant-looking as 3D World Runner (video)
  • Megaman Series – a classic franchise filled with large, colorful graphic and sweet soundtracks (video)
  • Chip and Dale Rescue Rangers – a two-player platformer with large sprites and lots of action going on with now slow-down (video)
  • Faxanadu – The mist levels are pretty intense for 8-bit (video)
  • Final Fantasy III: This Japan-only release was a killer RPG with a huge scope (video)
  • Marble Madness – the famous title had great physics of its own and a great 3D-like environment (video)
  • Totally Rad – One of the most colorful run-and-gun platformers on the console (video)

Check out the rest of Racketboy’s Games That Pushed The Limits Series

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96 Comments

pakopako says:

Huh. Three years after the article was published (and I was doing some searching for PoP) I stumble upon this. A nice read, but I must profess, I thought the NES couldn’t do parallax? Every single one of these games (from Metal Storm to Sword Master) uses pseudo-parallax trickery by the programming team. Instead of managing multiple background layers like the SNES or Genesis, it was all just one animated background.

J says:

Nightshade was one of the all-time great, and yet somehow mostly forgotten, NES games. Its graphics, sound, and the size of its world were all worthy of note, but its writing outshone all its other good qualities.

me says:

I have to say you contradict yourself and this whole article is sloppy at best. Someone says Metroid doesn’t count because it was an early release yet you have games on here that PREDATE Metroid. Second of all, I am sorry but dude some of those games look like late Atari games not pushing the system to it’s limits at all. I don’t mean to just pop in and criticize because I know any article such as this requires some thought not to mention everybody will disagree with something here and there. I think honestly you just got carried away and added too many games. I am not trashing the article or your writing entirely I just think this whole article is sloppy and should have had a little more defined criteria. You started off talking about late releases and worked backwards to early releases that look like crap compared to the games at the top of the list. And dude I don’t know what console you are playing but NONE of those games, no not even Batman Return of the Joker look anything close to 16 bit, the Genesis launch titles blow every one of those away graphically with the exceptions being Super Mario Bros. 3, and maybe Kirby but every one of those other games mentioned looks obviously inferior graphically to 16 bit games unless when you say 16 bit you are talking about TG16 which is NOT 16 bit but whatever I forgot what I was originally searching for so you can thank Google and their broken search engine for bringing me here to rip your article apart.

Also I disagree that making a chip work with the system counts, because that is not pushing the hardware to it’s limits that is altering the hardware to over come the limitations. There is not a lot of difficulty in getting two chips to talk to each other that is pretty basic programming they were doing long before NES came along.

Sorry I don’t mean to nit pick everything and I really don’t care I just felt like commenting since stupid google somehow thought searching for SNES games released in 1991 meant I was looking for a half assed article about NES games that is obviously designed to appeal to a certain audience. Don’t get me wrong I am a HUGE NES fan and have been since I was a kid, way back when it was brand new. But the thing is I think sometimes people let their nostalgia get in the way of their ability to be objective. But since it is all subjective anyways there is nothing saying I am more right than you just thought I would share some criticisms nothing personal.

Patrick BBE says:

Captain Skyhawk. Check Classic Game Room’s review.

me says:

in response to:

“me
November 3, 2011 at 9:50 pm

I have to say you contradict yourself and this whole article is sloppy at best.”

^That guy needs to get his head outta his ass and come down off his high horse. Pretentious nerd rant

Ness says:

In case you can edit, Thrilla’s Surfari was released in 1992.

alphatrion says:

It doesn’t really matter whether the games had extra chips in them or whether the programmers only used what was built into the nes. what matters is the programmers found tricks, used them, to push the system into doing things not originally designed for. The end result being games with some very impressive results using limited technologiy.

retro101 says:

Abit of a disgrace that Mr. Gimmick isn’t on here. Should be right at the top of this list.

It makes kirby look like nothing with hardware limitations, and you would think it’s a 16bit game; the sound is top notch aswell.

Maniax says:

no Captain Tsubasa Vol II ? This list sucks!! 😛

Diego says:

Battle Formula also has some great effects, like the curve on the road and the bridge in first stage!!

TheBlockMage says:

Star Tropics was definitely one of the best looking games for the NES.

zerothis says:

Check BattleToads Double Dragon: The Ultimate Team. Simulated 3D surfaces, the rotating turbines in later levels, so many things animated in the ‘background’. Multilayer environment for enemies and players to navigate. You actually had to bounce grenades around corners at one point like you were playing a modern FPS. Play it in a real machine, emulators mess up the most impressive effects.

Recca is pretty impressive. Dragon Warrior IV has scenes where their are moving people/sprites all over the screen too. No flicker. Impressive by NES standards. But Krazy Kreatures blows everything else out of the water! 100+ little _moving_ critters flying in to the screen with no flicker at all. And it works on emulators.

Disney seems to require higher standards for animation, color, and generally nailing the look of their characters. IMO, The Jungle Book is the best of these. Play it in a real machine, emulators mess it up. It doesn’t count, but it should. The Lion King for NES. Its an unlicensed game, made without Disney or Nintendo’s consent. I hope someone at Disney thought “We need to hire these people” before thinking “we need to sue these people”. Oh, their’s 2 other unauthorised Lion King games for NES, not that impressive.

MrMateczko says:

No Mr. Gimmick? This list is rubbish…jk. But it’s weird that you have ommited this very awesome and very rare game.

Topological Brane says:

In terms of the graphics, Metal Slader Glory has to be in there. Also it is the largest official NES (well, technically Famicom as it never made its way out of Japan) title at 8Mb (=1MB). It definitely had that CD-Rom feel to it.

http://m.youtube.com/watch?v=lRkFxSBKeFs&desktop_uri=%2Fwatch%3Fv%3DlRkFxSBKeFs

Someone already mentioned Zanac and Gun-nac. They were the best shooters on NES, technologically and gameplay-wise. As impressive as Recca and Gradius 2 were, Zanac and Gun-nac took the shooters to the next level with their super fast scrolling, huge number of enemies without a hint of slowdown, sophisticated power-up system, and amazing AI system which altered enemy distributions (type and numbers) and attack patterns depending on how players played the game, including the usage of auto-fire joysticks. Zanac was my favourite and it had more depth, although Gun-nac was more fun to play.

Carlos Gabriel says:

Well, after looking some 10 hours looking for games to buy for my old NES , i finaly found this article.
ANd i must thanks the writer as well as all the people who post comments because this page is full of nice NES titles that i never heard about in the other pages i did visit ( such as Recca Summer Carnival among many others )

So, thank you for the inspiration to all of you guys and gals , i really mean it ! (-;

Snorfls says:

There is one other NES game I feel needs to be added to this list, and that is Super Spy Hunter the sequel to the arcade original Spy Hunter. The sequel has incredible music, multiple game modes (cars, boat plane), insane amounts of bullets on screen, huge jumps and more…

All in all I find it as one of the most impressive sunsoft and nes games out there.

MangaX says:

Not sure why the first Batman game didn’t make the list.
Personally, I think it looked better than Return of the Joker.

https://i.pinimg.com/originals/48/39/f9/4839f9127abef7b7b08dfa60ad111c44.gif

Golden Primus says:

The game Gargoyle’s Quest II definitely deserves a place on the list.
Talk about a game that looks as good as a SNES title.

Hi SC0RE says:

Mr Gimmick
U-Foria
Adv. Island 4
Final Fantasy 3

Rubén says:

Miss some of that amazing games:

Power Blade 2 named as Captain Saver in Japan. The second Power Blade game, that shows amazing graphics and nice playability.
Mr Gimmick. Probably, the second best game on all the system. Only that…
Mitsume Gaa Toru. Imposible to believe that this game is it made for a Famicom.
G.I. Joe: A Real American Hero. A lot of characters with a different abilities. You can learn new moves killing enemies.
Dragon Fighter. It’s a Castlevania game, but you can transform to a Dragon, and now it’s a Shump. The final bosses are fucking amazing.

Hi SC0RE says:

Mention to Mr. Gimmck and Uforia Saga

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