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Godzilla Trading Battle is a PlayStation video game released only in Japan in 1998 by Toho Co., Ltd. It featured almost every Toho kaiju up to that point as well as 6 new monsters created exclusively for the game.

Tokyo 23-ku: Seifuku Wars is a visual-novel style adventure game with light RPG elements set in an alternate-universe Tokyo where uniforms are actually battle suits which grant special powers. After a series of conflicts that ultimately result in the destruction of the capital, all uniforms are brought under the control the oppressive organization "Heaven". At the same time, Ryuji Kizaki, the leader of the Uniform Freedom Organization "HELP", has gone missing. The main character is trying to track down Kizaki in order to end the rule of Heaven and restore freedom. The game plays out in a standard visual novel style, with the player choosing a location from a map and then reading through extended dialogue sequences which depict the story's events. Occasionally, there are card-based battles in which the player must defeat the opponent by selecting the proper alignment of attacks to counter the enemy's type.

Horizontal scrolling action based on the popular "Zeiram" special effects movie directed by Keita Amemiya. By using the 3D polygon characters and background appearance to achieve dramatic camera work as a movie scene, it becomes a powerful realization. Operate the Bounty Hunter Ilya, and she shall be confronted with the most powerful Zeiram combat organisms.

Nontan to Issho: Kuru Kuru Puzzle is a game based on a children’s anime and book series telling the story of a young kitten and his animal friends. It is a block puzzle game the likes of Tetris and Baku Baku Animal, where the goal is to stack blocks in a way that matching ones are connected and therefore disappear. Unlike in Tetris games though, the blocks cannot be rotated – they can instead be flipped around to reveal different blocks on the reverse side. There’s also the usual bonus blocks that remove entire rows, as is common in this genre. A two-player mode is also featured, even though unlike what usually happens in two-player gameplay of puzzle games, the actions of one player will not affect the other directly (like having more blocks falling on your opponent’s screen after you scored pretty high).