About: List of Sailor Moon video games   Sponge Permalink

An Entity of Type : dbkwik:resource/P523CCUvdd3wqfAWjdsdQg==, within Data Space : 134.155.108.49:8890 associated with source dataset(s)

Sailor Moon video games were first released in Japan in 1993 during the height of the media franchise's popularity. By 1998, twenty games were released. As of 1995 the games each had sales of about 200,000 to 300,000. The games have never been released in any other country, but the only exception is the Bishoujo Senshi Sailor Moon game developed by Angel, which was released in France. Games are rare to find in other countries, but can be downloaded or played on the internet with ROMs or emulators. Sailor Moon Bishoujo Senshi games are on computer and PlayStation with ROMs.

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rdf:type
rdfs:label
  • List of Sailor Moon video games
rdfs:comment
  • Sailor Moon video games were first released in Japan in 1993 during the height of the media franchise's popularity. By 1998, twenty games were released. As of 1995 the games each had sales of about 200,000 to 300,000. The games have never been released in any other country, but the only exception is the Bishoujo Senshi Sailor Moon game developed by Angel, which was released in France. Games are rare to find in other countries, but can be downloaded or played on the internet with ROMs or emulators. Sailor Moon Bishoujo Senshi games are on computer and PlayStation with ROMs.
  • The Sailor Moon video games were released in Japan during the height of the media franchise's popularity. By 1998, twenty games were released. The games released as of 1995, each had sales figures of about 200,000 to 300,000. They have never been released in any other country, with the single exception of the Bishoujo Senshi Sailor Moon game developed by Angel, which was released in France in 1994. The games are hard to find in any other country unless downloaded from the internet as ROMs. The last Sailor Moon-related game to date was released in November 2001 - Happy Chibiusa World.
sameAs
dcterms:subject
dbkwik:manga/prope...iPageUsesTemplate
Platforms
Series
  • Sailor Moon Games
Genre
Caption
  • Box art for Bishoujo Senshi Sailor Moon
  • Box art for Bishoujo Senshi Sailor Moon R
  • Box art to Another Story
refimprove
  • January 2009
Title
  • Sailor Moon
  • Sailor Moon R
  • Pretty Soldier Sailor Moon
  • Pretty Soldier Sailor Moon S
  • Pretty Soldier Sailor Moon: Another Story
  • Sailor Moon Arcade
  • Sailor Moon SuperS Shin Shuyaku Soudatsusen
  • Bishoujo Senshi Sailor Moon SuperS - Zenin Sanka!! Shuyaku Soudatsusen
  • Pretty Soldier Sailor Moon S - Jougai Rantou!? Shuyaku Soudatsusen
Media
  • 1(xsd:integer)
  • 3(xsd:integer)
  • SNES/Super Famicom Cart, Mega Drive Cart.
  • Super Famicom cassette
Input
  • 1(xsd:integer)
  • Super Famicom Controller
Cabinet
  • Upright
Distributor
  • Tecmo
Modes
  • 1(xsd:integer)
Released
  • 1994(xsd:integer)
  • 1995(xsd:integer)
  • 1996(xsd:integer)
  • 1997(xsd:integer)
  • 1993-12-29(xsd:date)
  • --08-27
  • --09-22
  • March 1995
  • SNES/Super Famicom Version
  • Sega Mega Drive Version
Developer
Publisher
Designer
  • Junya Inoue
rewrite
  • April 2009
abstract
  • Sailor Moon video games were first released in Japan in 1993 during the height of the media franchise's popularity. By 1998, twenty games were released. As of 1995 the games each had sales of about 200,000 to 300,000. The games have never been released in any other country, but the only exception is the Bishoujo Senshi Sailor Moon game developed by Angel, which was released in France. Games are rare to find in other countries, but can be downloaded or played on the internet with ROMs or emulators. Sailor Moon Bishoujo Senshi games are on computer and PlayStation with ROMs.
  • The Sailor Moon video games were released in Japan during the height of the media franchise's popularity. By 1998, twenty games were released. The games released as of 1995, each had sales figures of about 200,000 to 300,000. They have never been released in any other country, with the single exception of the Bishoujo Senshi Sailor Moon game developed by Angel, which was released in France in 1994. The games are hard to find in any other country unless downloaded from the internet as ROMs. Bandai produced a small number of Sailor Moon games, but the majority were handled by a Japanese game company called Angel. Early games were side-scrolling fighters, whereas later games were unique puzzle games, and even later titles chose to go a versus fighting game style. Another Story was the only game to stand out, being a role-playing video game. Panic in Nakayoshi World was also released, an overhead Adventures of Lolo-style puzzle game featuring characters from various Nakayoshi-printed manga. Sailor Moon and Chibi Moon are playable characters. The games mainly saw release on the Super Famicom, with the first side-scroller being ported to the Mega Drive. A separate arcade side-scrolling fighter was also released. In addition, two side-scrolling adventure games were produced for the Game Boy (Sailormoon and Sailormoon R), and a side-scrolling game was also produced for the Game Gear (Sailormoon S). The first versus fighting game from the series was released for the 3DO. However, as the 3DO did not sell well outside of Japan, this game has gone largely unnoticed. Produced by Bandai themselves as opposed to Angel for the other two, this game is considerably different. A final versus fighting game was released for the Sega Saturn and PlayStation. The last Sailor Moon-related game to date was released in November 2001 - Happy Chibiusa World. A game was released in the U.S. for the PC. It was a minigame compilation titled The 3D Adventures of Sailor Moon. Aside from the theme, the games did nothing to tie in to the series. On July 15, 2010, Bandai Namco Games Europe announced development of a new Sailor Moon video game for Nintendo DS, Sailor Moon: La Luna Splende, an adventure game featuring environmental puzzles that takes place in Molly/Naru's dreams.
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