
Goof Troop was a fairly forgettable Disney cartoon starring Mickey Mouse’s talking dog pal, but at least it gave us a surprisingly good Super Nintendo game. Regardless of which version you play, this is a game that all strategy and RPG fans need to experience at least once. There’s also a quality PlayStation port that’s slightly cheaper, but still one of the higher priced games on that system. The SNES version is one of the rarer titles on the console, but it’s since been re-released on the Wii Virtual Console. And what a revolution it is, as you spend dozens of hours recruiting and building an army of soldiers, witches, and even griffins in a strategy game that still feels incredibly deep more than 20 years later. The very first game in the series appeared on the SNES and began with a tarot reading that determined your fitness for leading a revolution against an evil empire. Ogre Battle is possibly the greatest unfinished saga in gaming. Ogre Battle: The March of the Black Queen The art, which was created by Fist of the North Star artist Tetsuo Hara, almost made the game feel like a Street Fighter II wrestling game, which is not a bad thing at all. Saturday Night Slam Masters was one of those games, playing more like a traditional fighter that ends with pinning your opponent than a wrestling game. Saturday Night Slam MastersĢ0 Underrated 3DS Games By Chris Freiberg These are the 25 most underrated games on the SNES: 25.



There’s a lot more to the SNES library than just Mario, Samus, and Link, and more than two decades later, many of these games are still criminally overlooked.

And that’s not even counting games made by outside studios, such as Capcom and Konami. It’s not difficult to see why: Super Mario World, Super Metroid, and The Legend of Zelda: A Link to the Past are the very best games in their respective series. From third-party titles to Nintendo’s own franchises, this was an era-from 1990 to 1996-that showcased the platform’s total dominance over the industry, even as the Sega Genesis proved to be a strong competitor-and we all know who won that console arms race in the end. Much of the console’s success has to do with its roster of games, of course. Even though the Big N has released five more consoles since the Super Nintendo, many Nintendo fans would say the SNES is still the best console that the House of Mario has ever released.
