Gangster Alley cover image

More games like Gangster Alley

More games like
Boxart for Gangster Alley
Gangster Alley
on RetroAchievements (Atari 2600)

Track your cross-platform game library with PlayTracker

Create an account for free, link your accounts like RetroAchievements (Atari 2600), and create your ultimate gaming profile!
Create account
Based on total audience overlap on PlayTracker,
players who liked Gangster Alley also liked:
Boxart for The Adventures of Cookie & Cream
The Adventures of Cookie & Cream
on RetroAchievements (PlayStation 2)
86% audience match

Players will enjoy puzzling challenges like they've never seen before in this unique party game for the whole family. For the first time in an Action/Platformer, both characters must work cooperatively to help each other through every trap, over each obstacle, and past some very hungry critters that would love to have them for dinner!

Boxart for Girls in Motion Puzzle Vol. 1: Hiyake no Omoide + Himekuri
Girls in Motion Puzzle Vol. 1: Hiyake no Omoide + Himekuri
on RetroAchievements (Saturn)
80% audience match
Boxart for Dragon Quest III
Dragon Quest III
on RetroAchievements (NES/Famicom)
67% audience match

Dragon Quest I.II is an enhanced remake of the first two Dragon Quest games. It has few modifications to gameplay, but the interface and graphics have been enhanced to be on a par with the 1992 Dragon Quest V, and the games have been rebalanced to make them slightly easier.

Boxart for Jet Force Gemini
Jet Force Gemini
on RetroAchievements (Nintendo 64)
60% audience match

The insect invasion has begun. The galaxy is being infested by the evil Mizar and his horde of Drones. Already, the planet of Goldwood has been subjugated and the peaceful Tribals enslaved. With an arsenal of mega-weapons at their disposal, the Jet Force Gemini team must travel in search of Mizar's lair - rescuing Tribals and splattering Drones along the way. But can Juno, Vela and their faithful dog, Lupus, exterminate the deadly threat before it's too late?

Boxart for Final Fantasy II
Final Fantasy II
on RetroAchievements (NES/Famicom)
60% audience match

Final Fantasy II is the second installment in the Final Fantasy series, developed and published by Squaresoft. It was directed by Hironobu Sakaguchi, with Yoshitaka Amano designing the characters and Nobuo Uematsu composing the score. It was notable for being one of the first story-intensive RPGs released for console systems, and introducing many series staples, including chocobos and a character named Cid. Its story is unrelated to the original FINAL FANTASY, and its gameplay is a major departure from the previous title for eliminating the traditional experience-based progression system.

Boxart for Final Fantasy IV
Final Fantasy IV
on RetroAchievements (SNES/Super Famicom)
57% audience match

FINAL FANTASY IV is the fourth main installment in the FINAL FANTASY series, developed and published by Squaresoft. It was released in July 1991 for the Super Nintendo Entertainment System in Japan, and released as FINAL FANTASY II in North America in October 1991 with alterations made due to Nintendo of America's guidelines at the time.

Boxart for Dragon Quest II
Dragon Quest II
on RetroAchievements (NES/Famicom)
55% audience match

Dragon Warrior II is an early top-down RPG that expands and improves on its predecessor. Unlike the first game, Dragon Warrior II allows the player to join forces with two other characters, a magic-using princess and a wizard-warrior prince. Also including expanded monster battles involving up to 6 creatures and a much larger world, Dragon Warrior II is an important step in the evolution of the Dragon Warrior series.

Boxart for Dynasty Warriors 3: Xtreme Legends
Dynasty Warriors 3: Xtreme Legends
on RetroAchievements (PlayStation 2)
50% audience match

Dynasty Warriors 3 is the third installment of the Dynasty Warriors series in North America and the second within the Shin Sangoku Musou series in Japan. It is a spin-off from the video game Romance of the Three Kingdoms and based around a series of books by the same name, written by Luo Guanzhong. The game contains a number of fictional and non-fictional elements from the same era in Chinese history that Romance of the Three Kingdoms is set. However, it follows the main events of part of the story which is to unify China under the single rule of a kingdom.