Plot: Girl's Garden is an action game developed and published by Sega for the SG-1000 console in 1984 or 1985. The game follows a girl as she gathers flowers to win the love of a boy. It was the debut work of Sega programmers Yuji Naka and Hiroshi Kawaguchi. Wikipedia
Plot: Buck Rogers: Planet of Zoom is a pseudo 3D video game released in arcades by Sega in 1982. Buck is never seen; the only connection to the license is the outer space setting. The game is a forward-scrolling rail shooter where the player controls a spaceship in a third-person perspective. Wikipedia
Plot: Sega Ninja is a 1985 arcade game released by Sega. The game features Princess Kurumi, the titular female ninja, battling enemies using throwing knives and throwing stars. Wikipedia
Plot: World Grand Prix is a racing video game released for the Master System in 1986. The player drives a Formula One style car as quickly as possible while navigating through turns and other vehicles on the road. A formal scoring system is not used; players are not ranked by position unlike most racing...
Plot: Bank Panic is a video game developed by Sanritsu and released in arcades by Sega in 1984. Bally/Midway manufactured the game in the US. The player assumes the part of an Old West sheriff who must protect a bank and its customers from masked robbers. Wikipedia
Plot: The Black Onyx is a 1984 role-playing video game released in Japan, developed by Bullet-Proof Software, with development led by Henk Rogers. It was one of the first successful Japanese-language RPGs, having sold 150,000 copies, and helped familiarize the Japanese public with RPGs. Wikipedia
Plot: Konami's Ping Pong is a sports arcade game created in 1985 by Konami. It is the first video game to accurately reflect the gameplay of table tennis, as opposed to earlier simplifications like Pong. It was ported to the Amstrad CPC, Commodore 64, Famicom Disk System, MSX, and ZX Spectrum. Wikipedia
Plot: Monaco GP is an arcade racing game released by Sega in 1979. One of the last Sega games to use TTL chips instead of a CPU, the game has players race against a clock and pass rival racers while attempting to earn points driving through five areas. Wikipedia
Plot: Pitfall II: Lost Caverns is a platform video game originally released for the Atari 2600 by Activision in 1984. It is the sequel to 1982's Pitfall!. Both games were designed and programmed by David Crane and star jungle explorer Pitfall Harry. Wikipedia