Port Comparisons

How games changed — or didn't — on their journey to every platform

Street Fighter II
Arcade · 1991
4 versions compared

Street Fighter II's journey from Capcom's CPS-1 arcade hardware to home consoles became a defining moment in the console wars, with each platform's version acting as a benchmark for what the hardware could deliver.

Mortal Kombat
Arcade · 1992
4 versions compared

Mortal Kombat's 1993 home ports ignited a national debate over video game violence when the SNES version removed blood and altered fatalities while the Genesis version restored them via a button code, directly leading to the creation of the ESRB rating system.

Doom
PC (DOS) · 1993
4 versions compared

id Software's Doom became the benchmark for first-person shooter ports throughout the 1990s, with conversions to every major console exposing the wide range of hardware capabilities and developer skill across platforms.

Sonic the Hedgehog (8-bit ports)
Sega Genesis · 1991
3 versions compared

Sonic the Hedgehog's simultaneous 8-bit adaptations for the Game Gear and Master System were entirely new games designed around weaker hardware rather than direct ports, resulting in a distinctly different — and largely underappreciated — branch of Sonic's early history.

Final Fight
Arcade · 1989
4 versions compared

Final Fight's SNES port was the system's flagship launch-window title but arrived with one player character removed, two-player co-op absent, and significant content censored, making it a textbook case of the compromises demanded by both hardware limitations and Nintendo's content policies.

Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles (Arcade)
Arcade · 1989
3 versions compared

Konami's four-player TMNT arcade brawler was one of the most beloved coin-ops of its era, and its home ports — particularly the NES version — demonstrated the significant sacrifices required to bring a wide-screen, four-player arcade experience to single-screen home hardware.

NBA Jam
Arcade · 1993
4 versions compared

NBA Jam's home ports brought Midway's outlandish two-on-two basketball game to virtually every platform of the mid-1990s, with the 16-bit console versions successfully preserving the game's frenetic energy and hidden character codes that made it a cultural phenomenon.

Out Run
Arcade · 1986
5 versions compared

Sega's Out Run became one of the most widely ported arcade games of the late 1980s, appearing on nearly every home computer and console of the era with results ranging from impressive to barely recognisable.

Pac-Man
Arcade · 1980
4 versions compared

Pac-Man's 1982 Atari 2600 port is one of the most notorious conversions in gaming history — a rushed, technically compromised release that contributed to the 1983 video game crash by failing to meet the expectations of consumers who paid full price expecting an arcade-quality experience.

Tetris
PC (Soviet Union) · 1984
5 versions compared

Tetris's journey from a Soviet research institute to the world's most-played game was complicated by one of the most contested software licensing disputes in history, ultimately handing Nintendo exclusive handheld rights and making the Game Boy version one of the best-selling games of all time.

Castlevania: Symphony of the Night
PlayStation · 1997
3 versions compared

The Sega Saturn port of Symphony of the Night, released exclusively in Japan, added significant new content including a second playable character, new areas, and new enemies — making it a collector's curiosity that offered a more complete game than the original PlayStation release.

GoldenEye 007
Nintendo 64 · 1997
3 versions compared

GoldenEye 007 was one of the most influential first-person shooters ever made and one of the best-selling N64 games, yet it went unported to any other platform for over two decades due to a uniquely complicated web of overlapping intellectual property rights.