Several video games titled
The Terminator were released, each of them based on the 1984
film of the same name. By 1988, Danish company Robtek had acquired the license to create games based on the film, but it subsequently went into
receivership before any game could be released. By mid-1989, development was underway by
Sunsoft on a
Terminator game, which would be released for the
Nintendo Entertainment System (NES). However, Sunsoft lost the license and eventually published the game as
Journey to Silius in 1990. Sunsoft reportedly lost the
Terminator license because the game did not follow the plot of the film, instead focusing solely on
Kyle Reese as he battles
Skynet's machines in the future. Gameplay footage had been shown at the
Winter Consumer Electronics Show in 1989, and the footage would resurface 30 years later.
DOS version The Terminator is a
DOS action-adventure game based on the first movie. In mid-1990,
Bethesda Softworks announced a deal with the
Hemdale Film Corporation to create computer video games based on
The Terminator. Bethesda Softworks developed and published the game in July 1991. It was the first game based on the
Terminator film series.
Sega versions A
shoot 'em up game, titled
The Terminator, was developed by
Probe Software and published by
Virgin Games. It was released in 1992, for several
Sega consoles: the
Mega Drive/Genesis, the
Master System, and the
Game Gear. Another shoot 'em up game, also titled
The Terminator, was released for the
Sega CD. It was developed and published by
Virgin Games in 1993. The graphics and music took advantage of the Sega CD's capabilities, and the game includes the use of
full motion video from the film.
Nintendo versions A
side-scrolling action game titled
The Terminator was released for the
Nintendo Entertainment System (NES) in December 1992. Gameplay consists of platforming and driving stages, with
Kyle Reese as the player character. It was sublicensed by
Bethesda Softworks, developed by
Radical Entertainment, and published by
Mindscape.
Nintendo Power called it an "uneven, jerky" experience with "awkward" controls and "blocky graphics". Gary Whitta of
Computer and Video Games (
CVG) was also critical of the graphics, and considered the gameplay outdated with no originality. He rated it 61 out of 100, while
MegaFun rated it 55 out of 100. Another side-scrolling action game, also titled
The Terminator, was released for the
Super Nintendo Entertainment System (SNES). It was developed by
Gray Matter and published by Mindscape in April 1993. The SNES version also puts the player in control of Kyle Reese. It features levels based on the film, including the future war in 2029, and the police station and nightclub in Los Angeles 1984. It also includes several driving levels.
CVG rated the SNES version 70 out of 100. The magazine criticized the graphics, stating that they resembled an
8-bit game rather than the 16-bit capability of the SNES.
CVG also criticized the difficulty, stating that checkpoints are placed too far apart.
N-Force found the gameplay boring and exceedingly difficult, rating the game 55 out of 100.
Nintendo Power considered the game an improvement over Mindscape's NES version. The magazine praised the graphics and music, Reviewers for
GameFan were critical of the game but praised its driving levels.
Mobile game A
mobile game,
The Terminator, was released in 2003. It is a
shoot 'em up developed and published by In-Fusio. ==
Terminator 2: Judgment Day (1991 film) games==