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The 30 Best Games on Sega Saturn

The 30 Best Games on Sega Saturn

The 30 Best Games on Sega Saturn
© Sega Saturn hardware
30. Dynamite Deka/Die Hard Arcade
©
29. NiGHTS Into Dreams
©
28. Powerslave
©
27. Assault Suit Leynos 2
©
26. Vandal Hearts
©
25. Magic Knight Rayearth
©
24. Virtua Cop 2
©
23. Bulk Slash
©
22. Deep Fear
©
21. Hyper Duel
©
20. Soukyugurentai
©
19. Virtua Fighter 2
©
18. Batsugun
©
17. DoDonPachi
©
16. X-Men vs. Street Fighter
©
15. Princess Crown
©
14. Dragon Force
©
13. Policenauts
©
12. Street Fighter Zero 3
©
11. Castlevania: Symphony of the Night
©
10. Shining Force III
©
9. Sonic Jam
©
8. Burning Rangers
©
7. Battle Garegga
©
6. Guardian Heroes
©
5. Panzer Dragoon II Zwei
©
4. Sega Rally Championship
©
3. Radiant Silvergun
©
2. Fighters Megamix
©
1. Panzer Dragoon Saga
©
The 30 Best Games on Sega Saturn
30. Dynamite Deka/Die Hard Arcade
29. NiGHTS Into Dreams
28. Powerslave
27. Assault Suit Leynos 2
26. Vandal Hearts
25. Magic Knight Rayearth
24. Virtua Cop 2
23. Bulk Slash
22. Deep Fear
21. Hyper Duel
20. Soukyugurentai
19. Virtua Fighter 2
18. Batsugun
17. DoDonPachi
16. X-Men vs. Street Fighter
15. Princess Crown
14. Dragon Force
13. Policenauts
12. Street Fighter Zero 3
11. Castlevania: Symphony of the Night
10. Shining Force III
9. Sonic Jam
8. Burning Rangers
7. Battle Garegga
6. Guardian Heroes
5. Panzer Dragoon II Zwei
4. Sega Rally Championship
3. Radiant Silvergun
2. Fighters Megamix
1. Panzer Dragoon Saga

The 30 Best Games on Sega Saturn

Arriving in its native Japan as the first 5th-generation console on November 22, 1994 (a full month ahead of the launch of the Sony PlayStation), the Sega Saturn is an interesting piece of hardware. Long considered Sega's most costly mistake thanks to the system's launch in North America with virtually no promotion, the Saturn would go on to become the company's best-selling home console in Japan despite its relative lack of success in the West. The Saturn's dual-CPU and eight processors (along with a cartridge slot to expand the console's working RAM) would allow it to be the de facto home for near arcade-perfect ports where systems like the PlayStation and Nintendo 64 struggled to maintain parity with coin-op games. As a result, some of the best games on the Sega Saturn are only available on the hardware, and many are Japanese-exclusive titles that never made their way stateside.

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