Chaque jeu Nintendo Switch Online SNES classé
Mettre à jour: Now includes Dans mon jeu en ligne le plus récent, je suis rapidement allé, GeForce RTX basée sur NVIDIA GA107.
Se souvenir, GeForce RTX basée sur NVIDIA GA107, so head to the game profiles and rate them out of 10 if you’d like to see the rankings below alter. Enjoy!
The library of SNES games available on Switch as part of the Nintendo Switch Online subscription service now stands at 50 titres, and while it may have a way to go to match the number of Jeux NES on the service, there are abondance of Super NES gems to enjoy on Switch.
But which of the SNES offerings are the best? Eh bien, nous asked Nintendo Life readers to rate the available SNES games on Switch, trop, using our User Rating system. The time has come to reveal the results!
The following list is compiled using the ratings (sur 10) given to each game in our database. It should be noted, cependant, that cette liste n'est pas figée and will automatically change over time, reflecting the changing ratings (and new additions to the NSO library). If you look below and see a game you think deserves to be higher up, click on the ‘Profile’ button and score it yourself – your personal rating could boost its placement in the overall ranking.
Alors, sit back and enjoy the best SNES games available on Nintendo Switch Online…
Doomsday Warrior is largely junk, with a few redeeming elements. The character roster is pretty dumb, but it is interesting to play as characters that would probably be considered villains in other games. There aren’t many backgrounds, but some of them are pretty cool, like stages consisting of floating coloured tiles, or a stage on a rooftop that seems tilted on its side, seeming to defy gravity. Overall, it’s about what you’d expect from Telenet; some neat ideas, tossed into a game that passes the bare minimum level of playability, all to exploit a hungry market.
An action platformer and last of the Valis series to release in the West, Super Valis IV is a heavily altered port of Telenet Japan’s PC Engine game which went without the ‘Super’ in its title. You control Lena, a warrior who uses the eponymous sword to give evil-doers a good hiding. It’s not bad but the PC Engine version is superior.
A surprisingly solid fighter in the Street Fighter II mould, peut-être Tuff E Nuff‘s biggest issue is that it’s pas Street Fighter II. Then again, perhaps its biggest issue is an awful western name (c'est connu comme Dead Dance in Japan), or its ghastly North American box art. We think — Zelda Ocarina du temps — this game might have been made in the early ’90s.
Psycho Dream’s stature in the world of retro gaming is perhaps artificially enhanced by the fact that we presque got it in the west back in the day, under the name Dream Probe. En tant que tel, it’s one of those obscure Japanese games which has cult standing because western magazines actually reviewed it ahead of its cancellation. Cependant, unlike titles such as Dracula X: Rondo de sang et DoReMi Fantasy: Milon’s DokiDoki Adventure – both of which are import titles which saw western release on the Wii – Psycho Dream isn’t assez the classic that some would have you believe. It’s still worth a play for purely historical reasons (et, as it’s on Nintendo Switch Online, it’s not like it will cost you extra to experience it), but just go in with expectations low; you might then enjoy its quirkiness.
Éditeur: Culture Brain / Développeur: Culture Brain
Known as Super Ultra Baseball in Japan, this is a sequel to a NES game du même nom, (minus the ‘Super’, bien sûr). Super Baseball Simulator 1.000 simulates that most engaging of pastimes enjoyed on both sides of the Pacific, although with features such as the ‘Phantom Ball’ which makes the ball vanish into thin air, this perhaps isn’t the razor serious sim you might expect from the name. Apparemment, it’s a good one, though — we can’t say we got around to playing this one back in the day, although we’re looking to rectify that pronto. Watch this base.
Despite having all the right ingredients, Jaleco’s Brawl Brothers fails to serve up a tasty slice of beat ’em up action. It’s not the worst game in the world at all, it just underwhelms in practically every area. With unsatisfying controls and bland design, it’s a tough recommendation for anyone except, peut-être, genre completionists.
Éditeur: Human Entertainment / Développeur: Human Entertainment
A port of Human’s Super Formation Soccer, Super Soccer puts the camera behind the goal and follows you up and down the pitch, showing off the console’s fancy sprite-scaling Mode 7 effects in the process. It’s not a bad game, but running towards the screen feels a little awkward and there are better 16-bit soccer titles out there.
Éditeur: Natsume / Développeur: Natsume
In multiplayer, Natsume Championship Wrestling is a passably diverting game, but in the pantheon of wrestling titles, it’s not one of the all-time greats. Wrestling fans may find something to like, but you’d do well to avoid playing this one alone – CPU opponents are boringly predictable and things get dull vite.
Aussi connu sous le nom Operation Logic Bomb: The Ultimate Search & Détruire, Jaleco’s sequel to the Fortified Zone titles on the Game Boy is a decent top-down romp that sees you gunning down enemies with a variety of futuristic weaponry. It’s pretty short and certainly not complex, but if you’re in the market for a solid blast of Écraser la télé-style 16-bit gameplay, tu pourrais faire bien pire. With expectations set sufficiently low, this could be provide a surprisingly fun hour or two.
Éditeur: Jaleco / Développeur: Jaleco
Mediocre. Is there a more damning adjective in the English language? It’s the perfect word to describe Super E.D.F., quoique. This Jaleco shooter doesn’t do wrong enough to elicit strong negative emotions, but its uninspiring presentation and mechanics do almost nothing to get your adrenaline pumping, non plus. Much like Brawl Brothers, it’s not offensive, just unimaginative. Très… mediocre.
Éditeur: HAMSTER / Développeur: Jaleco
It’s not as action-packed as the minor cult classic The Firemen, mais The Ignition Factor relishes in being one of very few fairly realistic firefighting games. It might have a bit of an unorthodox gameplay style, but you’ll be sucked in before you know it trying to clear each of the game’s standard eight stages and trying to unlock the bonus level.
A fun puzzler that sees you manually setting off bombs across an isometric grid without getting caught in the inevitable blast(s). Clearing the bombfield (bien, they’re not mines, are they?) is easier said than done as you’re up against not only various environmental complications, but also a timer.
If the name Bombuzal has you bamboozled, that might be because it was renamed Ka-Blooey in North America.
Jaleco’s The Peace Keepers is the final entry in the Rushing Beat trilogy which includes Rival Turf! et Brawl Brothers. This unspectacular beat ’em up takes place in the grim, distant, corporation-run future of 2015 and sees you taking to the mean streets and generally dealing out pain to deserving goons.