Publishers
					All the publishers for all the games we carry are listed here.  If you want to see what stock we have by that publisher, just click on the name				
				All Games In Stock By Capcom
Playstation
				Platform
				
									Rockman gets suited and booted to look more like a star of Battle of the Planets. His extra abilities allow for some real speed clocking in at a few Machs as he zooms through the platforms and flies across the rest of the level. Emotive use of cut scenes help encourage players to endeavour. Top drawer platform action.								
				PS4
				Action
				
									Capcom injects new life into its DMC series with five playable characters, stunning cityscapes to test out your combo skills and a quite stunning attention to graphical detail promoting this to the high art genre. Alas the waves of assaults can be relentless, yet the control remains intuitive giving great satisfaction when a perfect slice and dice combination rolls off the pad. Top hats off to Capcom for maintaining its triple A status despite the shift in format.								
				PS2
				Platform
				
									Drags Mega Man kicking and screaming into the 3D world in this first release on the PS2 and sends the 2D purists into a bit of a tizzy. Despite the smooth 3D sections the core gamplay is essentially 2D however with the camera switching to an isometric perspective. Coupled to that you have lavish anime sequences and lush cel shaded graphics to whet the palette. Stomping around in a 3D mecha sequence is certainly great fun.								
				Famicom Cart
				Shoot Em Up
				
									Tate, meaning vertical, scrolling shoot em up from Capcom’s classic stable of WWII plane blasters. Good, solid arcade mechanics and plenty to keep the guns ratatating in both smaller planes and the big, bad boss versions.								
				PS2
				One on One Beat Em Up
				
									Plenty of characters to choose from the rich source material of the Marvel Comics and Capcom back closets. The sequel was no slouch, yet Capcom improves and finely hones with its expert hand. But despite the presence of Jill from Biohazard and Sakura from Street Fighter, Genki remains resolutely a Spidey fan. A very rare find on the PS2 as one of the platforms (possibly any platforms) finest 2D titles. Comes with added gallery. Subtitled New Age of Heroes.								
				Playstation
				Platform
				
									Genki may be going soft, but we miss the day when you could find a safe spot on the screen and simply blast away until the boss destructs. With a slight pang towards a greater challenge, these bad boys demand not only full attention to weak spots, but also to keeping an eye on the platforms to avoid tumbling to boss rush purgatory. Rats!								
				Gamecube
				Action
				
									Gets right under your skin from the off as the sense of foreboding grows with each new assailant from the legions of the undead. The detail is a little too much at times.								
				PS3
				Action
				
									Genki must confess Biohazard gives us the jitters. Not quite as much as Konami’s Silent Hill – at least you know where you are with a brain hungry zombie, whereas its hard to suss many of Konamis nightmarish creatures. But we digress – Operation Raccoon City seems pretty free of friendly, furry forest dwellers and a much more trigger happy, FPS style of game than the original. Those of the old school may find it hard to fire off so many rounds, yet there is polish a plenty and a fright round most corners for those of mild disposition.								
				Figures
				Figure
				
									A fine pre order gift with high product values to these resin style figure heads which would look good in any cabinet. The Monster Hunter phenomena really swept Japan as much as Ryu did back in the day.								
				PS3
				Action
				
									Pretty gruesome with players taking to the narrow confines of the slum and its best not to hang around with the dull glint of a machete never too far behind. Clever programming to not keep the gaming world too open and assist players without feeling the restraint. Not for the faint hearted.								
				Figures
				Figure
				
									Delightful off shoot from Capcom’s mammoth Monster Hunter series. Ten different figures to collect: five different types, each in a different costume. Nice blend of modern and new Japan in the designs.								
				XBOX 360
				One on One Beat Em Up
				
									Realistic approach to the eternally youthful street fighting series with the pugilists looking more like a Western designed PVC figurine, if that makes sense. The stages are superb: those dim sums look delicious in Chun Li’s stage. Well oiled play mechanics from the king of the ring Capcom.								
				Super Famicom
				One on One Beat Em Up
				
									Requiring no introduction. The game that ignited the 16 Bit world and made a killing for importers at the time. As such worthy of a place in any collection. Thankfully the price has dropped somewhat too. With such brilliant characterisation, attention to detail and finely honed play mechanics its easy to see how Street Fighter swept the world. Subtitled the World Warrior.								
				Nintendo DS
				RPG
				
									A real triple A title that brings to mind the delights of Goemons romps with a feudal Japan setting. The graphical look is innovative and feels like an animated New Years greetings card with such delightful execution. Played as the young wolf setting out on an epic adventure which we would hate to ruin. A real treat for lone wolfs from start to finish and worthy of higher accolades.								
				Famicom Cart
				Shooter
				
									Run and gun action as players charge into the screen avoiding the pillar boxes, motorbikes and hand grenades as everything including the kitchen sink gets thrown at you to prevent your advance. Its hard not to warm to such gameplay with simple objectives and nothing to blame but your own lack of skill (and possibly army training) for not progressing and meeting the mission goal.								
				Playstation
				Platform
				
									Genki may be going soft, but we miss the day when you could find a safe spot on the screen and simply blast away until the boss destructs. With a slight pang towards a greater challenge, these bad boys demand not only full attention to weak spots, but also to keeping an eye on the platforms to avoid tumbling to boss rush purgatory. Rats!								
				PS2
				Action
				
									A release on the Japanese PS2 of the bad boy street life sim fresh from the PSP. The underground activities are starting to shake the very foundations of Liberty City such are their seismic proportions. Getting involved in a few more tremors shouldn’t hurt anyone.								
				PSP
				Simulation
				
									Beast battling game with quite a legion of followers in Japan. Its easy to see why though with expertly rendered ogres to lay into with precision planned armouries all looking very easy on the eye. Oozes with the Capcom polish of a triple A release.								
				Nintendo 3DS
				Action
				
									Beast battling game with quite a legion of followers in Japan so it is with some pride Nintendo bring it to the 3DS. Its easy to see why though with expertly rendered ogres to lay into with precision planned armouries all looking very easy on the eye and making the very most of the hardware. Oozes with the Capcom polish of a triple A release.								
				Merchandise
				DVD
				
									Featuring footage of a fine roster of titles along with some enjoyable television adverts, especially to Western audiences due to their differing marketing approaches. Okamiden, Monster Hunter Portable 3, Megaman Universe and Marvel Vs Capcom 3 will all be of interest to Capcom connoisseurs.								
				GameBoy Original
				Platform
				
									The name Rockman seems to more aptly convey the old school challenge the series presents and this version squeezes scintillating performance out of the GB. Yet it is more likely hardware restrictions such as found on the Famicom that led to the series gripping gameplay and tight play mechanics that launched a solid franchise. The gamers choice.								
				PSP
				Simulation
				
									Beast battling game with quite a legion of followers in Japan. Its easy to see why though with expertly rendered ogres to lay into with precision planned armouries all looking very easy on the eye. Oozes with the Capcom polish of a triple A release.								
				Gamecube
				Platform
				
									Akira’s involvement helps give Rockman a timely boost on his fifteenth anniversary with very smooth cel shaded graphics bringing the mega franchise up to modern expectations. But its ultimately a return to the old school roots of the series that make the platforming sections a real joy.  Includes the broadcast quality anime intro which is from the Japanese TV series.								
				Super Famicom
				RPG
				
									Based on the Dungeons and Dragons series, the plot sees you on a quest to investigate a rogue beholder (basically a castle with an all seeing eye, hence the title) when the roof collapses near to the entrance trapping you inside. The on screen action is cursor driven as you select various spells, weapons and armour. Masses of foes to defeat on the quest all with a distinct fantasy look to them, be it spiders, skeletons or dogs of hell.								
				Nintendo DS
				A Bit Special
				
									The stunning solicitor series created by Capcom as players must go all out for the conviction. Credit to the Japanese game market which still pulls out its own genres every now and then. I mean few companies would be bold enough to test out such a title. Known in the West as Phoenix Wright Ace Attorney.								
				GameBoy Advance
				Simulation
				
									Based more on the Rockman Exe Anime series than any other previous Mega Man game, progress rewards the player with new armour and chips are collected from defeated foe. Plenty of exciting material for fans of the little Mega Man.								
				Playstation
				Shoot Em Up
				
									Arcade classics 1942, 1943 and 1943 Kai on the one CD which is great to see as, aside from the 1941 Super Grafx conversion, until this release the home versions had been a tad disappointing. Thankfully Capcom’s back catalogue is well worth cashing in on. This particular version comes with a splendid art book detailing enemy planes from the games.								
				PSP
				Action
				
									Epic proportions to Capcom’s tasty slice of monster battling with a posse of well designed beasts and some mean armour to bring them the cold justice of steel. Graphically very polished as one might expect from a series that is building up quite a following in Japan. The attack patterns have been improved and with it being possible to miss attacking through lack of player skill; there’s plenty of variety and substance to keep players going for a good while.								
				Wii
				Simulation
				
									Beast battling game with quite a legion of followers in Japan so it is with some pride Nintendo bring it to the Wii. Its easy to see why though with expertly rendered ogres to lay into with precision planned armouries all looking very easy on the eye and making the very most of the hardware. Oozes with the Capcom polish of a triple A release.								
				Merchandise
				Accessory
				
									A small joystick which is manipulated to produce the special moves of the famous fight series and successfully pulling off the move rewards with an authentic sampled shout. Its possible to hone your fight skills in the lift or even on the train, but excessive use may require putting the specials into practise.								
				Merchandise
				Accessory
				
									A small joystick which is manipulated to produce the special moves of the famous fight series and successfully pulling off the move rewards with an authentic sampled shout. Its possible to hone your fight skills in the lift or even on the train, but excessive use may require putting the specials into practise.								
				Dreamcast
				One on One Beat Em Up
				
									Not quite wrestling, not boxing – no holds seem barred either in this encaged grapple fest. Plenty of modes of play and makes good use of the license, even down to the ability to edit your player. Still even without changing your man there are some brutal looking bruisers to choose from.								
				PS2
				One on One Beat Em Up
				
									Mixed martial arts groups are very popular and Pride is the appropriately named leader of the pack. Plenty of footage to get you in the mood with the music and announcer cranking up the tension, pugilists stroll out as player characters as they would in a real bout. A wealth of camera angles ensures not a single feint is missed with intelligent switching as the action progresses and you land on your opponent with a sharp knee. Brutal but mightily impressive and essential for fans of the movement.								
				PS2
				One on One Beat Em Up
				
									Subtitled ‘Golden Whirlwind.’ Comes with a warning of bad language, thankfully in Japanese. Genki would love to diverge more details if only the plot of Hirohiko Araki’s suitably named manga made sense… Recommended to fans with a deluge of new scenes. Also known as ‘Gio Gio’.								
				Wii
				Action
				
									Gets right under your skin from the off as the sense of foreboding grows with each new assailant from the legions of the undead. The detail is a little too much at times. The Wii remote is used to excellent effect – a steady trigger hand is a must to progress – especially when dealing with a zombie hostage situation. As is an eye for the odd exploding barrel to save valuable ammo. Using the knife is also realistic thanks to the Wii’s control. Successfully completing the game unlocks Ada from the PS2 version.								
				Playstation
				A Bit Special
				
									Subtitled ‘The Start of History’, one might expect more familiar titles than Son Son, Higemaru, Exed Exes and Vulgus. Exed Exes is probably the pick of the four, but with Son Son containing NHK Monkey’s exploits it will always be the apple of Genki’s eye.								
				PSP
				Action
				
									Epic proportions to Capcom’s tasty slice of monster battling with a posse of well designed beasts and some mean armour to bring them the cold justice of steel. Graphically very polished as one might expect from a series that is building up quite a following in Japan. The attack patterns have been improved and with it being possible to miss attacking through lack of player skill; there’s plenty of variety and substance to keep players going for a good while.								
				Playstation
				One on One Beat Em Up
				
									Set before the original Street Fighter, this features a host of faces to liven up the action: none fresher than Sakura, prouder than Rolento or wiser than old boy Gen. A couple of Final Fight characters even make a guest appearance. Superbly honed to give a balanced bout. Demonstrates the PSX’s fine 2D prowess as it throws beautiful pastel shaded combatants effortlessly around the screen.								
				Figures
				Figure
				
									The SF and Darkstalkers worlds collide in these gorgeously colourful 2″ figures complete with fireball projectile attack weapon. This set contains SF babe Chun-Li and the evil M. Bison, here seen harassing our beloved Chun-Li.								
				Figures
				Figure
				
									The SF and Darkstalkers worlds collide in these gorgeously colourful 2″ figures complete with fireball projectile attack weapon. This set contains Demitri Maximov and the darling Morrigan – looking slightly scarier and sexier than her kawaii, SD Pocket Fighter form.								
				Figures
				Figure
				
									The SF and Darkstalkers worlds collide in these gorgeously colourful 2″ figures complete with fireball projectile attack weapon. This is the rare variant combi of Demitri and Lilith who is looking very chirpy considering she represents the darkside of the divine. Fully poseable and guaranteed to brighten up any computer workspace.								
				Figures
				Figure
				
									The SF and Darkstalkers worlds collide in these gorgeously colourful 2″ figures complete with fireball projectile attack weapon being put to good use here by Akuma to Ryu’s displeasure. Fully poseable and guaranteed to brighten up any computer workspace.								
				PS2
				Sports
				
									Old school nostalgia in this Japanese anime charting the story of young Hoshi as he battles through gruelling training and beatings from his strict father to become a pitcher for the Tokyo Giants. The game involves mini games that must be successfully completed to unlock the hidden episode with plenty of rewards along the way.								
				Playstation
				A Bit Special
				
									Subtitled ‘The Start of History’, one might expect more familiar titles than Son Son, Higemaru, Exed Exes and Vulgus. Exed Exes is probably the pick of the four, but with Son Son containing NHK Monkey’s exploits it will always be the apple of Genki’s eye.								
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