Daily Pick

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

Pyjamarama cover
Pyjamarama (1984) turned bedtime into a surreal obstacle course, starring Wally Week as he sleepwalked through his own house in stripy pyjamas.
Pyjamarama
1984 • Amstrad • Commodore 64 • Spectrum
Pixel8Games 68% Users —
Sleepwalking chaos
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
Speedball 2: Brutal Deluxe cover
Speedball 2: Brutal Deluxe took the idea of a friendly sports match, threw it out of an airlock, and replaced it with metal armour and flying elbows.
Speedball 2: Brutal Deluxe
1990 • Amiga • Atari ST • Commodore 64
Pixel8Games 83% Users —
Enjoy a clean break
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
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
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
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
Gryzor (aka Contra) cover
Gryzor (1987) strapped a machine gun to your thumbs and dared you to run right, shoot everything, and still look cool doing it.
Gryzor (aka Contra)
1987 • Amstrad • Arcade • Commodore 64 +1 more
Pixel8Games 83% Users —
Run. Gun. Regret.
Rise of the Triad cover
Rise of the Triad (1994/95) took the Wolfenstein-style corridor shooter, chugged a can of soda, then started doing backflips.
Rise of the Triad
1994 • PC
Pixel8Games 86% Users —
Ludicrous gibs!
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
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.
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.
Doom cover
Doom started as a quiet Mars assignment and immediately escalated into shotguns, demons, and a full-blown trip to Hell.
Doom
1993 • PC • PS1 • SNES
Pixel8Games 94% Users —
One hell of a blast.
Blood cover
Blood (1997) gleefully dragged the shooter genre into a blood-soaked carnival of horror, humour, and absolute chaos.
Blood
1997 • PC
Pixel8Games 91% Users —
Horror with attitude
The Way of the Exploding Fist cover
Entering a martial arts tournament at the height of the genre's mid-80s popularity, The Way of the Exploding Fist draws clear inspiration from Bruce Lee's Jeet Kune Do, reinforced by its digitised kiai sample and visual nods.
The Way of the Exploding Fist
1985 • Amstrad • BBC • Commodore 64 +1 more
Pixel8Games 81% Users —
Participate in this morning's edification
Raid Over Moscow cover
Raid Over Moscow (1984) served Cold War panic as an arcade sampler platter: launch the interceptor, dodge defences, blow the silos, then head for the Kremlin like you'd lost a bet.
Raid Over Moscow
1984 • Amstrad • Apple II • Atari 8-bit +2 more
Pixel8Games 80% Users —
The empire strikes back
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