Ocean Software released versions of the game for the
ZX Spectrum,
Amstrad CPC,
Commodore 64,
Commodore Amiga and
Atari ST in December 1989. The
MSX version was released in February 1990 only in Spain, roughly one month later after the launch of the rest of Ocean's versions in that market. Taito produced conversions (known as
Taito Chase H.Q.) for the
Family Computer (1989),
Game Boy (1990),
Master System (1990),
TurboGrafx-16 (1990) and
Game Gear (1991). In 1992, it was released on the
Sega Genesis as
Chase H.Q. II (known as
Super H.Q. in Japan), with some minor changes, including alternative player vehicles. In December 1990, the game was included on the
Wheels Of Fire compilation, which also featured
Hard Drivin,
Power Drift and
Turbo OutRun on the Commodore 64. In June 1991, the game was released on the
Power Up compilation, which also featured also on the C64
Altered Beast,
Turrican,
Rainbow Islands and
X-Out. In 1991, the game was released for the
FM Towns. In 1993, Taito released
Super Chase H.Q. (known in Japan as
Super H.Q. Criminal Chaser) for the Super NES. Unlike other home versions, it is played in first person perspective and is based upon
Super Chase: Criminal Termination rather than the original
Chase H.Q. Gameplay is modeled on the original with some aspects of
S.C.I. incorporated. A PAL version of
Super Chase H.Q. was released exclusively in Australia in 1993 by
Mattel (Nintendo's ANZ distributor until 1994) and re-released by Nintendo Australia thereafter. There is also a
Super Chase H.Q. for the
Game Boy, which was released exclusively in North America, in 1994. The game is similar to the Game Boy's
Taito Chase H.Q. (1991). In 1996, Taito released an emulation of the arcade original for the
Sega Saturn in Japan, bundled together with
Special Criminal Investigation on one disc. A spin-off was released in 1989 titled
Crime City. The game play deviates from the traditional third-person driving and is instead a side scrolling type shooter. ==Reception==