NEC · Hudson Soft · Tokyo, 1987

PC ENGINE

The smallest console at launch. The first with CD-ROM.
Japan’s answer to the console wars — before there was a war.

1987 Japan Launch
CD First CD-ROM Console
8+16 Bit Architecture
700+ Games Released

The Machine

Compact, white, revolutionary. The PC Engine shipped in October 1987 and changed what a home console could be.

NEC PC Engine original white console with controller
NEC PC Engine (1987) - the original Japanese console in its distinctive cream-white housing. Smaller than a paperback book at launch.

What It Was

NEC and Hudson Soft built something that defied the era’s assumptions about what a home console needed to be.

The PC Engine launched in Japan on 30 October 1987, developed jointly by NEC and Hudson Soft. Its CPU, the HuC6280 designed by Hudson, ran at 7.16 MHz - an 8-bit processor that drove a genuinely 16-bit graphics subsystem. The result was a machine that punched far above its silicon specification, producing visuals that rivalled and frequently surpassed the contemporaneous Sega Mega Drive.

In North America the console launched in August 1989 as the TurboGrafx-16, marketed by NEC Technologies. The naming change leaned into the 16-bit marketing war then beginning between Sega and Nintendo — even though the PC Engine’s CPU was technically 8-bit at its core. No matter: the graphics hardware was the story, and the games made the argument for the platform compellingly.

Did You Know?

The PC Engine was smaller than a VHS cassette at launch — measuring just 14 × 14 × 3.8 cm. It was the world’s most compact home console in 1987, a title it held for years.

The PC Engine was never just a game machine. It was a statement about what Japanese engineering could deliver in a package the size of your hand. — NEC promotional material, 1987

Console Overview

Documentaries exploring the PC Engine’s remarkable history and its legacy.

The PC-Engine Chronicles

A comprehensive documentary exploring the unexpected success of the PC Engine, its technical innovations, and why the console that beat the Mega Drive to market is still remembered as one of the greatest gaming platforms ever made.

Documentary · Sakharu Baguette

History of the Amazing PC ENGINE! - Book I

Shmup Junkie’s essential breakdown of the PC Engine’s Japanese origins: the NEC/Hudson partnership, HuC6280 architecture, and why the platform dominated Japan ahead of the Mega Drive by two years.

Documentary · Shmup Junkie

The Games That Defined It

From arcade-perfect shooters to landmark CD-ROM RPGs, the PC Engine library was remarkable for its depth.

R-Type arcade flyer - a landmark shoot-em-up on PC Engine Neutopia gameplay screenshot - Zelda-style RPG for PC Engine Blazing Lazers gameplay - vertical shooter showcase Gate of Thunder - CD-ROM shooter

HuCard · 1988

R-Type

The definitive home version of Irem’s arcade masterpiece. Hudson Soft’s port compressed the experience onto a single HuCard and became a showcase for what the PC Engine could do.

HuCard Shoot-em-up Flagship

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CD-ROM² · 1989

Ys I & II

Falcom’s legendary RPG duology with full voice acting and a redbook audio soundtrack. A landmark for what CD gaming could deliver in 1989 — years before the competition.

CD-ROM² Action RPG

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CD-ROM² · 1992

Gate of Thunder

Hudson Soft’s technical showcase for the TurboDuo. Redbook audio, fluid parallax scrolling, and five stages of escalating intensity made it the CD-ROM²’s killer app.

CD-ROM² Shoot-em-up

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