• In 1981,
Bandai Electronics manufactured a
hand-held VFD version of the game. • A 3D Board Game was released by Bandai in 1981, exclusively in Japan. • A 1985 sequel titled ''Crazy Climber '85
was produced, but it was put into storage by Nichibutsu in favor of Terra Cresta. This unreleased sequel was eventually included in on the PlayStation version of Nichibutsu Arcade Classics''. • A Japanese-only sequel,
Crazy Climber 2, was produced in 1988. The game was essentially identical to
Crazy Climber in gameplay but featured more sophisticated graphics and a few new features. • On February 3, 1996,
Hyper Crazy Climber was released only in Japan for the
PlayStation. It has similar gameplay to that of the original game but also a few differences. Players can choose between three cartooney characters, each with their own strength/speed attributes. Several buildings can be selected from a
Bomberman-style map screen, including an underwater building, a medieval clock tower, a haunted skyscraper, and a beanstalk. Power-ups are also used. It was also released for Windows on November 30 the same year. • On March 2, 2000,
Crazy Climber 2000 was released for the
PlayStation. This is more of a remake of the original arcade game using 3D graphics for the first time. A notable feature is the ability to turn corners and access different sides of the buildings, which now have a variety of designs (including one with a cylindrical, tower-like shape). The game included the original port of the arcade
Crazy Climber and a scan of the instruction panel. Like
Hyper Crazy Climber which released for the same console 4 years earlier,
Crazy Climber 2000 was released only in Japan. • Japanese publisher
Hamster Corporation released the arcade version of
Crazy Climber under their
Oretachi Gēsen Zoku Sono (オレたちゲーセン族) classic game line for the
PlayStation 2 on July 21, 2005. •
Crazy Climber Wii was released for the
Wii in Japan on December 20, 2007. • The arcade game was released on the
Virtual Console in Japan on February 23, 2010. • The game was released for the
PlayStation 4 by Hamster Corporation as the first installment of their
Arcade Archives series. It was also released for the
Nintendo Switch in February 2018. ==See also==