(1995) for the PlayStation, which lists the inclusion of Pac-Man, Rally-X, New Rally-X, Galaga, Bosconian, Pole Position, and Toy Pop'' on its front cover. The
Nintendo Entertainment System received official
multicart compilations that re-released earlier games, such as
Super Mario Bros. / Duck Hunt / World Class Track Meet. In the early 1990s,
Codemasters, an unlicensed publisher, used multicarts to release new games in their
Quattro compilations.
Action 52, released by Active Enterprises, is infamous for its low quality.
Pirate Nintendo compilations often included
ROM hacks that replaced character
sprites. Following a new interest in
retro gaming in the 1990s, companies began re-releasing their back catalog in video game compilations commercially, such as
Microsoft Arcade (1993) for Windows, and the 1995 releases of the first games in the
Atari 2600 Action Pack series for home computers and the
Namco Museum series for the
PlayStation. Video game consoles saw compilations of older arcade games, such as ''
Arcade's Greatest Hits and Williams Arcade's Greatest Hits, while Windows computers received compilations of console games, such as the Sonic & Knuckles Collection. Three Wonders'' is unusual for a 1991 arcade machine for being a compilation of three games. Renewed interest in
retrogaming has motivated the release of multiple compilations in the 2010s and 2020s, such as
Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles: The Cowabunga Collection and the
Irem Collection series. ==References==