Summary

  • Starflight: A groundbreaking Sega Genesis strategy game set in space, featuring a vast universe to explore and innovative gameplay ideas.
  • Mega-Lo-Mania: An early "god game" that still holds up today, with features like real-time strategy, territorial expansion, and technology advancement.
  • General Chaos: A satirical strategy game that stands out with its comedic take on common strategy game concepts, offering a unique and fun experience for fans of the genre.

The SEGA Genesis is a console that has mostly been forgotten about today. Many of the games from the SEGA Genesis era are too old even for the modern remake craze, but it was a time of great innovation for gaming, and many of the games created during this time inspired their more famous successors on later consoles.

Best-Sega-Genesis-Games,-Ranked
Best Sega Genesis Games, Ranked

The Sega Genesis featured numerous video games that are still considered shining examples of the medium.

Whether players are fans of strategy games today or not, older gamers will remember a time when it was one of the most popular genres. Due to not needing high-end graphics, many of the most popular strategy games ever are still played by many gamers today.

8 Starflight

IMDb Score: N/A

Starflight
Starflight
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Strategy
RPG
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Released
August 15, 1986
Platform(s)
Amiga ST, Amiga 1000, Commodore 64, Sega Genesis, PC
Developer
Binary Systems
Genre(s)
Strategy, RPG

A game that was way ahead of its time in 1986, Starflight involved exploration of space in addition to combat and trading. A role-playing style of game, there was a huge volume of strategy involved as players became starship captains exploring the universe. Considered by many to be the Star Trek of Sega games, this was a wonderfully fun strategy game for the time, which despite featuring 16-bit graphics, still intrigues players today, and even helped inspire games like Starfield.

This is because of the shockingly expansive universe, featuring 270 different star systems, each with a single-digit number of planets residing there. This made for over 800 planets to explore, although some would lead to the starship breaking if the planet’s force of gravity was too strong. This incredible game featured several brilliantly innovative ideas and deserves to be remembered today, particularly the Sega Genesis port which came later, as it involved a completely revamped version of the game.

7 Mega-Lo-Mania

IMDb Score: N/A

Mega Lo Mania
Mega-Lo-Mania
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Strategy
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Released
1991
Platform(s)
Amiga 1000, Amiga ST, Sega Genesis, SNES, MS-DOS
Developer
Sensible Software
Genre(s)
Strategy

Originally released for the Amiga, Mega-Lo-Mania was one of the early “god” games that involved the player taking control of one of the available gods to try and defeat other gods and conquer an island, in a real-time strategy format.

Despite being an early development in the strategy genre, Mega-Lo-Mania contains many recognizable features that have remained part of RTS games to this day. When the player builds armies, they can invade enemy sectors, build towers to expand the player’s territory and defend areas. Players can advance through tech levels and even repair individual buildings, making for a very modern feel for such a retro game, which can still be found today.

6 General Chaos

IMDb Score: 6.9/10

General Chaos Sega Genesis
General Chaos
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Strategy
Tactical
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Released
1993
Developer(s)
Game Refuge
Platform(s)
Sega Genesis
Genre(s)
Strategy, Tactical

A rare sight in the strategy genre, even today, General Chaos was one of the very first satirical takes on the many common ideas of strategy games. Comedy isn’t something that gets a lot of attention in strategy games, but this story is about two brothers, Chaos and Havoc, who get into a blood feud over a ripped comic book and become dictators of two different countries before warring with each other for decades.

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Players have to pick one of four teams, each coming with different classes of soldiers, with different strengths and weaknesses. With a fun style that remains unique today among strategy games, and being one of the few strategy games that remains exclusive to the Sega Genesis, General Chaos deserves a revisit for all strategy game fans.

5 Romance Of The Three Kingdoms 3

IMDb Score: 7.5/10

Romance Of The Three Kingdoms 3
Romance Of The Three Kingdoms 3: Dragon Of Destiny
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Turn-Based Strategy
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Released
February 4, 1993
Platform(s)
PC, PS1, Sega CD, Sega Genesis, SNES, TurboGrafx-CD
Developer
Koei
Genre(s)
Turn-Based Strategy

Part of a long-running series that continues today, Romance Of The Three Kingdoms 3 featured six different scenarios for players to try out. Released on multiple platforms, each game in the series explores a different area geographically or a different part of history. This edition featured Chinese battles from throughout the 2nd-3rd Century.

A fascinating and not frequently explored region of history, even today, in strategy games, these different scenarios lay the entire map of China out according to history at that time, and players are then tasked with trying to take over every city to win. Since there were 46 different cities to take control of, this made for a fascinating campaign that could easily be revisited today.

4 Populous

IMDb Score: 7.5/10

Populous map
Populous
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Simulation
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Released
June 5, 1989
Platform(s)
PC, Nintendo Game Boy, Super Nintendo Entertainment System, Sega Genesis
Developer
Bullfrog
Genre(s)
Simulation

The game which has been credited with the creation of the “god game” genre, Populous, is one of the best-selling PC games of all time, in addition to being highly successful when ported to platforms such as the Sega Genesis. Players can manipulate their followers to destroy the followers of their enemies in each stage, of which there were over 500.

With various divine powers, and the ability to manipulate and control one’s followers, players hugely enjoyed the concept of becoming a god in Populous. Between follow-up games and many games that have been inspired by this one, Populous truly started an entire sub-genre of the strategy game.

3 Herzog Zwei

IMDb Score: 7.7/10

Herzog Zwei
Herzog Zwei
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Strategy
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Released
January 11, 1990
Developer(s)
TechnoSoft
Platform(s)
Sega Genesis, Switch
Genre(s)
Strategy

The best strategy game that was exclusive to the Sega Genesis, at least until it was re-released in 2020 for the Nintendo Switch, Herzog Zwei is an RTS game that lets players take control of a flying, transforming mech that can purchase units and fly them around the battlefield to unleash them where they are most needed.

Each vehicle that players buy can enact a specific purpose, but the player’s mech will have certain abilities that only it can perform. Herzog Zwei was beloved at the time for keeping things simple to a degree, but having many wonderful options for micromanagement for players who preferred a more complicated style of game.

2 King’s Bounty

IMDb Score: 7.9/10

King's Bounty Sega Genesis
King's Bounty
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RPG
Strategy
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Released
1990
Platform(s)
PC, Sega Genesis
Developer
New World Computing
Genre(s)
RPG, Strategy

Known as the game that inspired series like Heroes of Might and Magic, King’s Bounty is a turn-based strategy game set in a fantasy world, although the notable difference in the Sega Genesis version was a switch to a real-time format.

Following players as a hero who are leading an army against the forces of the evil Arech Dragonbreath, players have to find 25 pieces of a map before they can find the location of the all-powerful Sceptre of Order. Although the PC version is likely better remembered, the huge shifts for the Sega Genesis, involving armies moving on the overworld of their own accord to attack the player, raised the difficulty and made the game feel hugely modernized even now.

1 Dune 2

IMDb Score: 8.6/10

Dune 2 (game) cover art
Dune 2: The Building of a Dynasty
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Strategy
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Released
January 1, 1992
Platform(s)
Sega Genesis, Amiga 1000, PC
Developer
westwood studios
Genre(s)
Strategy

Not the first RTS game ever made, but such a definitive edition of the genre at the time, and such a fine example of so many systems and features that remain popular today, that it is considered the forerunner of franchises like Command & Conquer and Warcraft, and other strategy games with great stories. Dune 2, known in the Genesis version as Dune: The Battle For Arrakis, is an incredibly well-loved strategy game.

Early in the game, the player chooses a house from three options and arrives on Arrakis, attempting to establish a base. Later, they must fight against the other houses for control while harvesting as much spice as possible. The goal is to control the entire planet while gathering the spice required by the Emperor. This classic game is as beloved and well-remembered as any game from the early 90s, and it is one of the best-licensed games ever.

MORE: Weird Facts No One Knew About the Sega Genesis' History