Play Neo Bomberman Arcade Online
Hudson Soft made Bomberman a computer game, like an arcade game with mazes. The first Bomber Man home computer game came out in 1983 for the MSX, NEC PC-8801, NEC PC-6001, Sharp MZ-700, and FM-7 in Japan, and for the MSX and ZX Spectrum in Europe (known as Eric and the Floaters in the UK and Don Pepe Y Los Globos in Spain). It had a Japanese follow-up called 3-D Bomberman, in which Bomberman moves through the path from his point of view. The game Bomberman came out for the Family Computer in 1985. Namco's game Warp & Warp, which came out before Bomberman, is probably where the idea for Bomberman came from.
Under rocks are doors that lead to more confusing rooms. Bomberman has to use bombs to blow up the rocks to get to the doors. Some things can help Bomberman improve his bombs, like the Fire skill, which makes his bombs go farther when they explode. When Bomberman flees and gets to the top, he will change into a person. There are 50 levels in each game. The first games you could play on your home computer were simpler and had different rules.
   In 1980, Bomberman was made as a technical test for Hudson Soft's BASIC assembler. This very simple version of the game came out on a few PCs in Japan in 1983 and Europe the next year. Shinichi Nakamoto "ported" the game to the Famicom and said he did it all by himself in 72 hours.
Hudson Soft used an enemy image from their 1984 NES/Famicom port of Broderbund's Lode Runner to make Bomberman's appearance in this game. This is an early form of Bomberman's more famous look: a robot with a pink antenna. The game was also made into a "Game B" mode for Atomic Punk, which came out on the Game Boy.
