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WCW: The Main Event

WCW: The Main Event
WCW - The Main Event Coverart.png
North American cover art featuring Sting
Developer(s) Beam Software
Publisher(s)
Producer(s) Sue Anderson
Designer(s) Steve French
Programmer(s) Cameron Sheppard
Artist(s) Alex Efstratiades
Jos Valdman
Composer(s) Marshall Parker
Series WCW
Platform(s) Game Boy
Release date(s)
  • EU: 1994
  • NA: February 1994
Genre(s) Sports (Wrestling)
Mode(s) Single-player
Multiplayer (up to two players)

WCW: The Main Event is a professional wrestling video game released in 1994 by FCI for the Nintendo Game Boy portable video game system. It was the second video game based on World Championship Wrestling, and the first of two released to a handheld console.

The European title of this game is WCW Wrestling: The Main Event.

There are two types of matches available: a set number of falls (best of one, three, or five) and a set time limit (five, ten, or fifteen minutes). Each wrestler has his unique special move along with punch, clothesline, bodyslam, suplex, dropkick, and cross body block. One can choose between a single match and an elimination match which runs the gauntlet of the remaining wrestlers.

Throwing one's opponent out of the ring is possible, as is fighting outside of the ring. There is no ten-count while both wrestlers are outside of the ring, but one will start after one enters.

These wrestlers used in the game were considered to be the top-ranked superstars of the WCW as of 1993. They were Rick Rude, Ron Simmons, Steve Austin, Sting, Dustin Rhodes, Johnny B. Badd, Big Van Vader and former tag team duo The Steiner Brothers (who had left for the WWF shortly before the game's release but still appeared in the game anyway, likely due to it being too late to remove them from the game before its release).

GamePro gave the game a negative review. They commented that the options are varied and the controls effective, but that "The fights themselves look weak - the large, cartoony sprites lumber towards each other with bored spectators behind them. The fights sound weak, too, with thin hit effects ..."


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