Konamiis not the Japanese juggernaut it once used to be. During the early years of the NES, Konami was putting out so many games that they had to make a subsidiary company, Ultra Games, to get past Nintendo’s strict release laws. They were on top of their game until the HD generation.

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It was here that things started to slow down. Now,Konamiis more like a nostalgic name that occasionally puts out some low-effort console experience. What happened to them is a long story but for now, it’s time to remember some of their odder titles. Can Konami make an effort to bring these games back at the very least?

8The Legend Of The Mystical Ninja

The Legend of the Mystical Ninjais part of theGoemonserieswhich was huge in Japan. Sadly this game is one of very few that ever made it to the West. It’s a combination of a 2D action side-scroller and a top-down adventure game similar toThe Legend of Zelda.

This iteration also featured co-op for some extra fun. It’s one of those classic SNES games that would be perfect for a Switch return either on the free SNES application or as part of some sort of remastered collection.

Fighting a boss in The Legend Of The Mystical Ninja

7Vandal Hearts

When it comesto tactical RPGson the PS1, most tend to rememberFinal Fantasy Tactics. While many regard that as still the best tactical game around, on any system, there were other choices for RPG fans on the PS1. For example, Konami made two games as part of theVandal Heartsseries.

They featured similar strategy gameplay but with an even darker tone thanFinal Fantasy Tactics. Finding either game now is like trying to find a needle in an RPG haystack which is such a shame.

Fighting a battle in Vandal Hearts

6Lifeline

Lifelineis one of the wildest concepts to have ever happened on the PS2. The main character was a waitress aboard a space hotel that eventually gets invaded by alien bugs. Players did not control her directly but instead issued commands with a microphone that was packaged with the disc.

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The concept was that players were safe in a security room which was how they were able to see what everyone else was doing. The idea was interesting fora survival-horror experiencebut the voice command input did not work 100% of the time. It was ahead of its time, so it may work better now as a remaster.

5Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles

Konami made some of the bestTMNTgames on the NES, SNES, and in arcades. Most fans don’t rememberanything pastTurtles in Time, butTeenage Mutant Ninja Turtleswas the first in a trilogy of 3D brawlers for consoles of the PS2 generation.

This first game, released in 2003, featured two-player co-op whereas the sequels thankfully featured the more normal four-player co-op. All three of these games are better than what they were credited for at this time. They still look amazing thanks to the cel-shaded artwork, but admittedly the gameplay can be repetitive.

Rio in Lifeline

4Boktai: The Sun Is In Your Hands

Boktai: The Sun is in Your Handswas another wild concept on the same level asLifeline. This was a GBA game that had a solar panel etched into the back of the cartridge. This was an action game with gameplay similar toMetal Gear Solidexcept players fought zombies, vampires, and other creatures of the night.

Players were armed with a solar-powered gun that had to be charged with the sun, hence the solar panel. Leave itto Hideo Kojimato think outside the box.

Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles PS2

3Shaman King: Master Of Spirits

Konami helped usher in theera of Metroidvaniasthanks toCastlevania: Symphony of the Night. There are a lot of great Metroidvanias in that series past that first example but Konami also made several based on anime. One example isShaman King: Master of Spirits, which did have one sequel.

Related:Best RPG Games Based On Anime

They were both on the GBA and featured the main hero, Yoh, going after spirits in a side adventure. The world map was interconnected, but it didn’t take place in one big castle, unlike most Metroidvanias. Still, they count as some of the most underrated games in the genre.

2NeverDead

NeverDeadwas a wild ride between it being announced at E3 and the game itself. It was a third-person shooterstarring a zombiewhich doesn’t sound that dramatic at first. Upon getting hit, the player would lose limbs to the point of just being a head rolling around on the ground.

Eventually, players could recall their body parts and jump back into the action. The game was filled with some of the cheesiest dialogue around, hearkening back to some of the best zombie B-movies. It wasn’t a masterpiece but Konami and the developer, Rebellion, certainly swung for the fences with this zombie game.

Exploring the world in Boktai

1Metal Gear Survive

There are a few games in this series that got overlooked upon release. The most recent one wasMetal Gear Survive, which received a lot of backlash because of how the fallout between Hideo Kojima, Konami, andMetal Gear Solid 5 happened.

The game itself was a decent survival simulator with classicMetal Gear Solidaction. There were too many microtransactions and other glitches, but it was better than it had any right to be. Some other examples includeMetal Gear Solid: The Twin Snakeson GameCube, bothMetal Gear Acidgames on PSP, andMetal Gear: Ghost Babelon GBC.

Fighting enemies in Shaman King Master Of Spirits

Promo art featuring characters in NeverDead

A cutscene featuring characters in Metal Gear Survive