F-1 Dream (Japanese: F1ドリーム?) is an automobile racing arcade game released by Capcom exclusively in Japan in 1988. It also had a PC Engine port released on August 25, 1989.
A Formula One licensed racing game for the PC Engine and the second game in Nichibutsu's F1 Circus series. F1 Circus '91 is a top-down Formula One racing game with a strong simulation element. Players kit out their vehicle, take on various prominent Formula One competitors of the era in races that track the vehicle's damage and fuel. Due to the high speeds involved, players need to pay attention to flashing icons that indicate turns coming up in the road. The game followed 1990's F1 Circus and was followed by 1992's F1 Circus '92. The series would then move to the Super Famicom as Super F1 Circus.
The object is to win all the major international races on the Formula One circuit. The game can be played by either one, two or even three players (Battle Mode-only) simultaneously. Various modes of racing include: regular season, battle (which is similar to exhibition or single race mode in other Formula One video games), and the time trial mode which tests how fast a player can drive his or her race car on any of the world's premier road courses. Only the vehicles from the 1994 season are used. Michael Schumacher and Satoru Nakajima are the most popular racers in this video game, even though Nakajima is a hidden character.
Side scrolling BMX game from Turborilla
Supercross 3D brings the excitement of arena supercross racing to the Jaguar. Not only do you get to race ahead of your competitors, you can catch big air on the huge jumps and perform a few tricks. There are three game modes: Practice, Single Race, and Tournament. In practice mode, you can race around any track for as long as you like. In single race mode, you compete in one race against the computer. Finally, in tournament mode, you compete in a series of races to accumulate points and become the Supercross champion.