5. Virtua Fighter 2
On Nov. 30, 1995, no other fighting game for any other console could even dream of competing with the Saturn version of Yu Suzuki’s incomparable sequel. The animations were so realistic, so fluid, and the battles so strategically and cleverly organized that pressing buttons, as in Tekken (for example), was punished rather than rewarded.
4. Panzer Dragoon II Zwei
There are relatively few big, expensive Sega action games in history that seem more remarkable than the German-named Panzer Dragoon II Zwei, released for the Saturn in the spring of 1996. This prologue to the first game gave us a chance to control Lundi/Lagi more thoughtfully and rewardingly, and everything from the mesmerizingly beautiful design to the bombastic music made this one of the console’s best titles.
3. Sega Rally Championship
Soul Calibur, Virtua Fighter 2, Sega Rally Championship… Sega, as we all know, is behind some of the most brilliant and successful arcade conversions ever released, and the home version for the Saturn of their hyper-popular arcade classic, was one such game that truly enchanted.
2. Athlete kings
Track & Field II and Sega’s painfully underrated London 2012 – The Official Video Game of the Olympic Games are two great Olympic games, but neither could ever match Athlete Kings (Decathlete in Japan) for being the best. The best Olympic game of all time was developed by Sega itself and is actually still just as entertaining. It had brilliant design, brilliant humor and brilliant game mechanics, all of which made this a winner of the coveted Olympic gold.
1. Nights: in dreams
Sonic the Hedgehog creators Yuji Naka and Naoto Ohshima had an idea after completing Sonic & Knuckles for a platformer in the same vein where the hero could fly. After several concepts were developed, they agreed that Nights was the way to go, and the rest, as we all know, is history. Nights had small fragments of the mystique found in the first Sonic game, but it was stranger, less understandable and thus more original. It was atmospheric like nothing else for Sega’s 32-bit machine, beautiful and offered absolutely brilliant game mechanics that quickly became addictive.