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Game Boy Advance multiplayer racing adventure game, released in Japan as "Choro Q Advance 2" and in Europe as "Gadget Racers". Road Trip: Shifting Gears continues the Takara-developed racing series on the GBA, and has the ability to link to Road Trip: Arcade Edition on the GameCube for unlockable extras. Players have full control over car customization, down to the most minute detail with a body paint shop, more than 100 different parts, and numerous fantasy attachments. Players compete in 150 racing events, minigames, in more than 64 courses. The game supports link cable connectivity for up to four players. In this release, Western localizations titles were swapped out, as North America rebranded into "Road Trip: Shifting Gears" (previously titled "Gadget Racers"), while Europe adopted the name "Gadget Racers" (previously titled "Penny Racers").

Gadget Racers is the first of two Choro-Q video games to be released on the Nintendo GameBoy Advance.

Puzzle Arena Toshinden takes the furious fighters right out of the ring and into the world of puzzle games! The game plays out much like the Puyo Puyo series by Sega. Connect 3 balloons of the same color to make them disappear. Get combos to have black pieces fall on the opponent's side that are harder to get rid of.

Ippatsu Gyakuten: Keiba, Keirin, Kyoutei is a Sports game, developed by Electronics Application and published by Pow, which was released in Japan in 1996.

Hanafuda-ou is a Miscellaneous game, developed by Electronics Application and published by Coconuts Japan, which was released in Japan in 1994.

Dynamic Stadium is a baseball game from Eleca/Electronics Application released exclusively for the Super Famicom. While adopting the same behind-the-batter perspective as Namco's Famista series, Dynamic Stadium presents its athletes as comic book heroes rather than chibi figures, making them absurdly buff and frequently featuring action shots of them catching fly-balls and narrowly making it to base before being caught out. "Safe!" and "Out!" calls are presented as spiky word balloons. Dynamic Stadium does not feature an official NPB license, so all the team names are fictitious. The game was published in Japan by Sammy Corporation and was never localized for overseas territories.

Battle Blaze is a weapon-based fighting game from 1992, set in a medieval fantasy world. Players choose warriors to duel in story and versus modes. While offering an interesting concept, the game was hindered by stiff controls and a limited moveset compared to other fighting games of its era.