Videos by ComicBook.com
1) Bill Laimbeer’s Combat Basketball

In 1990, Hudson Soft released Bill Laimbeer’s Combat Basketball on the Super Nintendo — and it was the first basketball game released on the system. It’s set in 2031, where Bill Laimbeer is the commissioner of basketball. He’s fired all the refs and created a game with no rules, where the use of weapons is not only allowed but encouraged. It’s a violent basketball game that’s incredibly unusual, and unlike most sports games you’d find on similar systems of the period. It was also a huge stinker, earning significant criticism across its execution, including sound, graphics, and controls.
2) Boogerman: A Pick and Flick Adventure

Boogerman: A Pick and Flick Adventure is a 2D platformer that arrived on the SNES in 1995, though it first appeared on the Sega Genesis the year prior. It’s a gross-out game in the vein of the Garbage Pail Kids, and at the time, that style of video game was killing it. Think Earthworm Jim, but instead of worms, it was all about flicking boogers. Boogerman: A Pick and Flick Adventure was incredibly well-received and built a decent cult following. There was an attempt to fund a sequel via Kickstarter, but the campaign raised only $40K of the requested $375,000.











