Master of Monsters (PC-98). SystemSoft, 1989. (Source)
Cosmic Funnies
AnasAbdin
Game of Thrones Daily
Cosimo Galluzzi
KIROKAZE
dirt enthusiast
Three Goblin Art
h

❣ Chile in a Photography ❣

Love Begins
"I'm Dorothy Gale from Kansas"
ojovivo
No title available
No title available

oozey mess
Show & Tell

roma★
taylor price
Not today Justin
TVSTRANGERTHINGS

seen from Türkiye
seen from United States
seen from United States
seen from Romania
seen from United States
seen from United States

seen from United States
seen from United States
seen from United States
seen from United States
seen from United States

seen from United States
seen from United States
seen from United States
seen from United States
seen from United States

seen from United States

seen from United States

seen from United States
seen from United States
@abobobo
Master of Monsters (PC-98). SystemSoft, 1989. (Source)
Top: Unreleased artwork by Akiman for the Super Famicom version of Final Fight (1990). According to Akiman, he disliked the outsourced artwork for the port so much that he drew this, but ultimately his submission went unused. (Source) Bottom: The released cover art for Final Fight on Super Famicom. Artist unidentified. (Source)
Kuro no Ken: Blade of the Darkness (PC-98). Forest, 1995. (Source) Illustration by Nobuteru Yuuki aka NOB.
Diorama of Hyrule, used in the instruction manual for The Legend of Zelda. Clean photo comes from the official Nintendo website that was launched in 2021. (Source)
Mystic Ark instruction manual (Super Famicom, 1995). Illustrations by Akihiro Yamada. (Source)
Makaimura (aka Ghosts 'n Goblins) illustration by Hideki Ishikawa. Featured in the Capcom Design Works artbook, it's unclear if the illustration had a commercial purpose. Looks great, though!
Illustrations by Yasuhiro Kagami, for the F-Zero light novel, written by Katsuyuki Ozaki and published in 1992 as part of the Futabasha Fantasy Novel Series. (Source)
Character illustrations by Hitoshi Yoneda from the Elnard instruction manual (Super Famicom, 1993). Elnard was released in North America as The 7th Saga.
Double Dragon II: The Revenge in Nintendo Power (Issue 10, January/February 1990). (Source) Although not directly credited, the illustrator is almost certainly Shuji Imai, who also drew the Howard & Nester comics.
Splatterhouse illustrations from Marukatsu PC Engine magazine (Volume 16, April 1990). (Source)
Ninja Master's: Haō Ninpō Chō (Neo Geo). ADK, 1996. Illustration by "Seijin", thought to be the pen name of Haruhito Tomobe. (Source)
Katsuya Terada illustrated Diablo (Blizzard Entertainment, 1996) for the cover of Game Hihyou ("Game Criticism") magazine Vol. 15. (Source)
Game Hihyou prided itself on being an independent voice of criticism in games by not publishing advertisements or taking money from game companies, but eventually strayed from its original goal and became more mainstream. It ran 69 volumes from 1994-2006. (Source)
This issue of Game Hihyou also featured a comic by Terada, as well as an interview with him.
Cover artwork for the North American version of Contra: Hard Corps (Sega Genesis, 1994), by Mark A. Nelson aka MANSYC. 1. This ink drawing was used in a Contra: Hard Corps advertisement in the Lethal Enforcers II Sega CD manual. (Source) 2. The watercolored version was used as an internal concept. (Source) 3. The final artwork as it appeared on the box.
Cover art for 2010 Street Fighter on Famicom (1990). Artist unidentified. (Source) 2010 Street Fighter was released a year before Street Fighter II: The World Warrior and stars Kevin Striker, a "galactic cybernetic police officer with the code name MX-5". Despite the title, 2010 Street Fighter is an action platformer and is not considered part of the Street Fighter fighting game universe. However, in the North American release the name was changed to Street Fighter 2010: The Final Fight, and the protagonist was changed to be a futuristic Ken from Street Fighter II.
Kow Yokoyama illustrations for a Famitsu Dragon Quest III guide (Issue 43 - February, 1988).
Alien Storm poster in issue 115 of Sinclair User magazine. (Source)
Hyaku no Sekai no Monogatari: The Tales on a Watery Wilderness (Famicom). ASK, 1991. (Source)