Super Bowling

It was developed by KID and published by Athena, originally only for the SNES.

It became a rare collectors item, with complete copies now selling for upwards of $1,000USD.

The game released late in the N64's lifespan, and did not sell well, which has been attributed to its rarity.

Entertainment Weekly gave the game a B and wrote that "while it still doesn't rack up to the real thing, at least Super Bowl (for Super NES) has a sense of humor — an animated green chicken comments on the action, the on-screen players make funny faces when they throw gutter balls, and there's a 'golf ball' option that lets you alleviate bowling's inherent lack of excitement by assigning pars for different pin setups.

Unlike The Blue Marlin or Side Pocket, Super Bowling offers at least one improvement over the real-life game: Scoring is completely automatic, meaning you don't need a degree in particle physics to tabulate two spares after a strike.