Daily Pick

Click and compare - it's in your hands:

Multi-platforms contain a sliding comparison video. Full list of games within the Quick Links section.

OutRun cover
OutRun wasn't about winning races, it was about vibes.
OutRun
1986 • Amiga • Amstrad • Arcade +4 more
Pixel8Games 88% Users 100%
Choose your route. Chase the horizon.
Ghosts 'n Goblins cover
Ghosts 'n Goblins (1985) gleefully armed Sir Arthur, knocked his armour off within seconds, and then kept kicking him while he was already down.
Ghosts 'n Goblins
1985 • Amiga • Amstrad • Arcade +4 more
Pixel8Games 78% Users
Die. Retry. Repeat.
Impossible Mission cover
Impossible Mission (1984) politely greeted players with an ominous “Stay awhile… stay forever!” before immediately trying to kill them.
Impossible Mission
1984 • Amiga • Amstrad • Commodore 64
Pixel8Games 90% Users
Timing is everything
Monaco GP cover
Monaco GP (1979) delivered white-knuckle racing long before realism was a selling point.
Monaco GP
1979 • Arcade
Pixel8Games 79% Users
Shift up, survive
Pole Position cover
Pole Position (1982) didn’t just ask you to race - it demanded you qualify first, instantly setting it apart from its coin-hungry rivals.
Pole Position
1982 • Arcade
Pixel8Games 71% Users
Qualify or quit
Super Mario Bros. cover
Super Mario Bros began with a plumber, a mushroom, and a simple goal, then quietly redefined platform gaming forever.
Super Mario Bros.
1985 • NES
Pixel8Games 93% Users
One plumber. Endless legacy.
Metal Gear Solid cover
Metal Gear Solid (1998) smuggled blockbuster drama into your PS1 memory card, then told you to stop shooting and start sneaking.
Metal Gear Solid
1998 • PS1
Pixel8Games 92% Users
Stealth with swagger
Batman: The Movie cover
Batman: The Movie (1989) wasted no time brooding, throwing players straight into Gotham's grime with surprising confidence for an '80s movie tie-in.
Batman: The Movie
1989 • Amiga • Amstrad • Commodore 64 +1 more
Pixel8Games 87% Users
Fear is the tool. Justice is the Knight.
Wipeout cover
Wipeout (1995) hurled you into anti-gravity racing where the tracks looked like nightclub flyers and the speed felt borderline irresponsible.
Wipeout
1995 • PC • PS1 • Saturn
Pixel8Games 89% Users
Speed with teeth
Bruce Lee cover
Bruce Lee blended martial arts, platforming, and exploration into something quietly special.
Bruce Lee
1984 • Amstrad • BBC • Commodore 64 +1 more
Pixel8Games 84% Users
Be water, my friend.
Target Renegade cover
Target: Renegade (1988) strutted in like a street brawler with a bad attitude and a worse neighborhood.
Target Renegade
1988 • Amstrad • Commodore 64 • NES +1 more
Pixel8Games 75% Users
Street justice, cheap shots
Airwolf cover
Airwolf (1985) arrived fuelled by TV hype, cello solos, and the promise of airborne firepower.
Airwolf
1984 • Amstrad • Arcade • Commodore 64 +1 more
Pixel8Games 57% Users
Cello in the air
Get Dexter cover
Get Dexter (aka Crafton & Xunk) dropped you into a glossy isometric sci-fi maze where an android and his tiny sidekick had to blag, dodge and gadget their way to an all-important code.
Get Dexter
1986 • Amstrad
Pixel8Games 82% Users
Crack the code, survive
The 7th Guest cover
The 7th Guest (1993) lured you into Henry Stauf's creaky mansion with shiny CD-ROM swagger and smirking FMV ghosts.
The 7th Guest
1993 • PC
Pixel8Games 89% Users
Puzzles, phantoms, bad decisions
Rolling Thunder cover
Rolling Thunder (1986) dropped players into a stylish spy thriller where trench coats were sharp, enemies were ruthless, and bullets were strictly rationed.
Rolling Thunder
1986 • Amiga • Amstrad • Arcade +2 more
Pixel8Games 83% Users
Cool under fire
Maniac Mansion cover
Maniac Mansion (1987) invited you to pick a trio of teenagers and trespass into the Edison household, where every room hid a gag, a trap, or a way to accidentally doom your friends.
Maniac Mansion
1987 • Amiga • Apple II • Atari ST +3 more
Pixel8Games 79% Users
Break in, think
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