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Firepower 2000
on RetroAchievements (SNES/Super Famicom)

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Boxart for Yu-Gi-Oh! Nightmare Troubadour
Yu-Gi-Oh! Nightmare Troubadour
on RetroAchievements (Nintendo DS)
57% audience match

Yu-Gi-Oh! Duel Monsters: Nightmare Troubadour is the first time that the Yu-Gi-Oh dueling card game has appeared on the Nintendo DS. You can build a deck out of more than 1000 cards, including three exclusive trading cards that come with each game. The bottom screen represents the card game area, utilizing full touch capabilities, and the upper levels displays characters as they battle in full 3D. Yu-Gi-Oh! Duel Monsters: Nightmare Troubadour also supports wireless play, letting you challenge your friends to a duel or trade cards wirelessly.

Boxart for Elevator Action Returns
Elevator Action Returns
on RetroAchievements (Saturn)
57% audience match

Elevator Action Returns, also known as Elevator Action II, is a 1994 run and gun arcade game developed and published by Taito. It is the sequel to Elevator Action (1983), featuring a much more gritty and realistic setting. Returns retains the elevator-based gimmick from the original, but expands the gameplay system and replaces the spy motif with a new scenario involving a paramilitary team fighting against a terrorist group.

Boxart for Pocket Monsters Midori [Subset - Monotype Challenge]
Pocket Monsters Midori [Subset - Monotype Challenge]
on RetroAchievements (Game Boy)
44% audience match
Boxart for Bust-A-Move 3000
Bust-A-Move 3000
on RetroAchievements (GameCube)
40% audience match

Everybody's favorite bubble-bustin' puzzle game is in the house for the Nintendo GameCube! Launch your bubbles and pop as many as you can before they reach the deadline. Score high by matching 3 bubbles or more to trigger a chain reaction. While the game play remains unchanged from Super Bust-A-Move, this version features new artwork and remixed music. The European and Japanese releases also include a new Space Invaders-style mini-game called "Shoot Bubble"

Boxart for Yu-Gi-Oh! Ultimate Masters: World Championship Tournament 2006
Yu-Gi-Oh! Ultimate Masters: World Championship Tournament 2006
on RetroAchievements (Game Boy Advance)
37% audience match

Yu-Gi-Oh World Championship Tournament 2006 is a video game based on the Yu-Gi-Oh! franchise. The game play involves the player collecting cards in-game and using them to battle the computer players. Players may also (upon completing the Free Duel mode) battle against Decks which they themselves have designed and saved. This game came with three promotional Yu-Gi-Oh! cards enclosed; they were "Helios - The Primordial Sun", "Helios Duo Megistus", and "Golden Homunculus". These cards were later available in English Blister Packs.

Boxart for The Fairly OddParents! Breakin' Da Rules
The Fairly OddParents! Breakin' Da Rules
on RetroAchievements (PlayStation 2)
35% audience match

Since his parents ignore him, and his evil babysitter, Vicky, torments him endlessly, Timmy Turner has been given two nutty fairy godparents to grant his wishes and cheer him up. The problem is, godparents Wanda and Cosmo have broken the rules, giving Vicky all their lost powers, and breaking the rule book in a strange twist of events. Join Timmy on this magical adventure to find all the pages of da broken rule book and restore his godparents' powers before they lose them forever. To do so, Timmy will have to enter the world of his favorite comic book and videogame, battle boy-eating plants and deadly viruses, and much more in this family-friendly platformer based on the TV show.

Boxart for Warriors of Fate
Warriors of Fate
on RetroAchievements (Arcade)
35% audience match

Warriors of Fate is a beat'em up with nine stages. Each contains large mobs including spearman, archers, strongmen, bomb-wielding opponents, and at least one boss. Using two buttons, Attack and Jump, the characters all have standard moves typical of Capcom side-scrollers of the day. There is also a variety of weapons in the game which can be picked up. As with most side-scrollers, food is used to replenish health and can be found in various breakable containers in the game level. One notable feature of the game is the ability to summon a warhorse which adds more attacks to the characters, generally involving pole-arms. Most characters are given a special wrestling throw of their own, like in Final Fight and The Punisher. In the Japanese version, the game follows Liu Bei's plight in Jingzhou from the Romance of the Three Kingdoms, a history-based novel from China, set in the Three Kingdoms period as Cao Cao sets to invade his lands. In the English adaptation, however, the Three Kingdoms theme was lost, and most names have been changed to names of Mongolian origin.

Boxart for Yu-Gi-Oh! Worldwide Edition: Stairway to the Destined Duel
Yu-Gi-Oh! Worldwide Edition: Stairway to the Destined Duel
on RetroAchievements (Game Boy Advance)
31% audience match

Yu-Gi-Oh! Worldwide Edition: Stairway to the Destined Duel is a censored version of Yu-Gi-Oh! Duel Monsters 6 Expert 2 (including the card artworks). Released in both Japanese and English, it is set during the Battle City arc. The player duels characters from the anime and manga, participating in a few tournaments and duel single opponents they come across on the map screen. Cards are awarded for various reasons, including defeating opponents, winning tournaments and free cards with the Duelist Weekly magazine. This game contains around 1,000 cards.