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8->''I can also play this game. HOME SIMULATION. It’s a fun game. I control Viktoriya. Viktoriya has a nice home. Viktoriya also has a computer. Viktoriya is playing RESIDENCE REPLICATION. Viktoriya controls Gleb. Gleb has a computer. Gleb is playing CABIN COPY. Gleb controls Izolda. I wish I lived inside a computer.''
9-->--'''Fanny,''' ''WesternAnimation/TuxAndFanny''
10
11Like a ShowWithinAShow, this is a videogame machine or console that exists (in-universe) inside a VideoGame and which the player may play to start a MiniGame, therefore it's a SubTrope of the latter.
12
13The distinction between this and minigaming in general is that most minigames depict otherwise "real world" tasks (like chopping wood, {{fishing|Minigame}}, or [[VideoGame/FinalFantasyVII racing giant birds]]) tailored to the particular setting. Here, the minigame is an actual game that exists within the character's world, usually with no relevance to the surrounding plot (though this is not a requirement).
14
15Sometimes the game is an EmbeddedPrecursor (see that page for such examples), an older unrelated game, or a [[FictionalCounterpart poorly disguised copy]] of a well-known existing game.
16
17May overlap with UnexpectedGameplayChange and BonusStage. Compare SidetrackedByTheGoldSaucer, depending on which one the player finds more engrossing. Or BettingMinigame where the game in question is used to farm in-game money. Or EmbeddedPrecursor, when the game within the game is an earlier game in the series. See also FictionalVideoGame and MediaNotes/BackwardsCompatibility (AKA ''Console Within a Console'').
18----
19!!Examples:
20[[foldercontrol]]
21
22[[folder:Action-Adventure]]
23* The gameplay and goal of ''Billy la Banlieue'' consists in the player character going around the city of Paris looking for arcade machines to play, including Space Invaders and Arkanoid.
24* In ''VideoGame/ANNOMutationem'', Ann can play an arcade version of ''VideoGame/{{Pong}}'' in some areas. Getting a high score will earn an achievement.
25* ''VideoGame/AnUntitledStory'' has a computer and several arcade cabinets with mini-games that you can access by buying them for your house from the store in Sky Town.
26* ''VideoGame/{{Blasphemous}}'': There's a hidden room in the Desecrated Cistern area that has an arcade machine in which you can spend Tears of Atonement to play an 8-bit platformer version of the game titled: "Blasphemous: Alcazar of Grief"
27* ''VideoGame/{{Eastward}}'': There's a playable ''VideoGame/DragonQuestI''-esque game titled [=EarthBorn=], which gives the player seven in-game days to gain enough levels before having to fight the Demon King. The second run requires having to gain enough experience and defeat the king's four generals before time is up.
28* In ''VideoGame/LaMulana'' (original version), by equipping certain ROM combinations with the [=MSX2=], you can play ''[=PR3=]'' and ''Mukimuki SD: Memorial''. The former is a parody of ''VideoGame/{{Parodius}}'' for the {{Platform/MSX}}, and getting a certain score in it is required to progress at a certain point of Hell Temple. The other begins sort of like ''VisualNovel/TokimekiMemorial'', but then drops its DatingSim mask and [[spoiler:turns into a variation of the "Snatcher Headhunter" game mentioned below]].
29* The Platform/NintendoWii version of ''VideoGame/IndianaJonesAndTheStaffOfKings'' has the Creator/LucasArts adventure ''VideoGame/IndianaJonesAndTheFateOfAtlantis'' as an (easy) unlockable. ''Staff of Kings'' was apparently bad enough and ''Fate of Atlantis'' (before it was put on Steam a month or so latter) rare/good enough for someone to make a replacement cover for ''Staff of Kings'' that makes the box look like a Wii version of ''Fate of Atlantis'' [[http://kotaku.com/5318977/if-you-bought-indy-staff-of-kings-this-might-help see here]].
30* The 'Raising Hell' expansion pack of ''VideoGame/{{Overlord}}'' has a section where you have to play miniature golf, and then Break-Out, with a fat halfling as the ball in both cases. The first is annoying, but the second is hilarious.
31* ''VideoGame/PacManWorld2'' features an arcade with unlockable classic pac man games in it.
32* ''VideoGame/TheWarriors'' had a ''VideoGame/FinalFight'' or ''VideoGame/DoubleDragon'' like BeatEmUp called ''Armies of the Night''.
33[[/folder]]
34
35[[folder:Adventure Game]]
36* Most Creator/HumongousEntertainment games would have at least one. Occasionally they would even factor into the plot.
37* In the PointAndClick room-escape ''[[http://neutralxe.net/esc/lights_play.html Lights]]'', you have to complete a handheld LCD game about chicks crossing bridges to get a code.
38* ''[[https://store.steampowered.com/app/937170/Otakus_Adventure/ Otaku's Adventure]]'', a wacky comical adventure game, has two:
39** One is a simple horizontal shmup featuring a flying cat as an app on the player character's phone. Completing it nets an achievement.
40** The other is plot-relevant. To get the girl in the arcade to notice you, you have to beat her at a game of ''Pong'', however she's pretty much unbeatable unless you buy the game's strategy guide at the convenience store. Having an entire strategy guide dedicated to ''Pong'' sounds absurd, but the whole game is just silly like that.
41* ''VideoGame/TheAdventuresOfWillyBeamish'' has Willy training for the [[BlandNameProduct Nintari]] championships using a game called Monster Squad. In the PC version, it's a cutscene of a platformer, but in the Sega CD version, it's a playable ''VideoGame/SpaceInvaders'' clone (and the Nintari [[ConsoleCameo looks like]] a Platform/GameGear).
42* ''VideoGame/DayOfTheTentacle'': Weird Ed has a computer in his room. Bernard can play the original ''VideoGame/ManiacMansion'' on it.
43* The player character in ''VideoGame/{{The Dig|1995}}'' had a PDA that functioned mainly as a way to communicate with other characters, but also had ''VideoGame/LunarLander'' installed on there. He'd even grumble about not beating another character's high score.
44* In ''VideoGame/LegoDimensions'', objects called Arcade Docks can be found in various levels. If the Gamer Kid's arcade machine gadget is used on one, it'll grant you access to one of 23 different [[Creator/MidwayGames Midway Arcade]] games[[labelnote:Specifically...]]''Toobin''', ''Xybots'', ''VideoGame/{{Paperboy}}'', ''Timber!'', ''Vindicators'', ''[=RoadBlasters=]'', ''VideoGame/MarbleMadness'', ''Blasteroids'', ''720°'', ''Cyberball 2027'', ''VideoGame/{{Klax}}'', ''VideoGame/SpyHunter'', ''VideoGame/{{Robotron2084}}'', ''[[VideoGame/{{Defender}} Defender, Defender II]],'' ''[[VideoGame/{{Joust}} Joust, Joust 2,]]'' ''[[VideoGame/{{Gauntlet}} Gauntlet, Gauntlet II,]]'' ''[[VideoGame/Sprint2 Super Sprint, Champion Sprint, BadLands]]'', and ''VideoGame/{{Rampage}}''[[/labelnote]].
45** The former's [[FourthWallObserver even aware that he's in a video game]] and acknowledges that the Midway Arcade World is essentially a world based on and comprised of several video games is inside a video game.
46* In a couple of the ''VideoGame/NancyDrew'' games, Nancy has to access a suspect's computer by solving or scoring points in their laptop's casual games. The GameWithinAGame boasts a [[StylisticSuck lower resolution]] than the rest of the ND game, presumably so it's obvious that this trope is in effect.
47* ''VideoGame/NightInTheWoods'' has ''Demontower,'' an isometric dungeon crawler featuring "The Palecat" on a quest to scale the aforementioned Demontower as her health drops from level to level.
48* ''VideoGame/{{Obsidian}}'' has three:
49** The "Play a Game" category on the computer terminals in the Bureau Realm, which includes a 20Q-style minigame, and a plot-relevant [[SignificantAnagram anagram game]].
50** The "[[IronicName Productivity]]" vidbot, also from the Bureau Realm, containing a sideways, double-breakdown game.
51** The Piazza sequence from the Bismuth Realm, complete with a board-sized version for tutorial. [[spoiler:You have to replay this game elsewhere to access the final dream world.]]
52* ''VideoGame/PoliceQuest4OpenSeason'' has "Stroids", an ''VideoGame/{{Asteroids}}'' clone, as an arcade machine at the Short Stop Bar.
53* Astro Chicken and Ms. Astro Chicken in the ''VideoGame/SpaceQuest'' series.
54** In ''VideoGame/{{Space Quest III|The Pirates of Pestulon}}'', the Astro Chicken game actually serves a plot point. In ''VideoGame/{{Space Quest IV|Roger Wilco and the Time Rippers}}'', the Ms Astro Chicken game is just there for fun.
55** ''VideoGame/{{Space Quest V|The Next Mutation}}'' includes a space-based ''Battleships'' variant. You get to play it about halfway through the game at the Spacebar when Captain Quirk challenges Roger to a game of Battle Cruiser. You can win or lose, it doesn't affect the plot, it's just one of the game's many [[LastLousyPoint last lousy points]].
56** In ''VideoGame/{{Space Quest VI|Roger Wilco in The Spinal Frontier}}'' winning a game of Stooge Fighter is required to progress. Most of the game up to that point is spent acquiring enough resources so you can successfully cheat your way to victory; your opponent is unbeatable without doing so.
57** The FanRemake of ''VideoGame/{{Space Quest II|Vohauls Revenge}}'' has an enhanced remake of ''Troll's Tale'', one of Creator/AlLowe's earliest games, on Vohaul's ship that Roger can play as an irrelevant side quest.
58* ''VideoGame/StoriesUntold'', episode "The House Abandon": This text adventure is a revisit to your childhood home, and your room has a computer and a game ready to be played. [[spoiler:The game is "The House Abandon", and it's a revisit to your abandoned house.]]
59* The Funmachine in ''VideoGame/StrongBadsCoolGameForAttractivePeople'' plays a different game in every episode. It occasionally even factors into the plot.
60** "Homestar Ruiner" has ''Snake Boxer 5'', a parody of ''Atari Boxing'' where you fight a procession of increasingly aggressive snakes.
61** "Strong Badia the Free" has ''Math Kickers featuring the Algebros'', a parody of edutainment games where you fight ninjas by making both sides equal.
62** "Baddest of the Bands" has ''Limozeen's Hot Babelien Odyssey'', a game based on ''VideoGame/{{Defender}}'' where you pilot the flying space-bus from ''Limozeen: But They're In Space!'' to rescue "babe-liens" from the clutches of Nebulon and Mitch Overlord. Strong Bad tries playing the game at the start of the episode when his Funmachine breaks down.
63** "Dangeresque 3: The Criminal Projective" has ''Space Circus Catastrophe'', a game reminiscent of the Space Mountain minigame in ''VideoGame/AdventuresInTheMagicKingdom'' where you shoot clowns, dodge giant circus food, and rescue the other performers. Strong Bad uses it to simulate a space mission to the Sun.
64** "8-Bit is Enough" has ''Gel-Arsie's Pro Fruit Boarder'', a skateboarding game starring the gelatin version of Marshie the Marshmallow ("Say it with me, the Cheat: Licensed games are ''never'' good!"), and part of the episode involves activating the game's "kill screen" so you can recruit Gel-Arshie. Completing the episode unlocks ''Trogdor's [=3D=]-Ungeon'', where you play as Ultimate Trogdor and try to burninate as many peasants as you can while avoiding getting "sworded" by Strong Bad.
65* In ''An Aspie Life'', ''Shoot Man'' is found at the arcade, and an [[Platform/SuperNintendoEntertainmentSystem SNES]] style console plays games like ''CR Drive''.
66* ''Manga/UruseiYatsura: Dear My Friends'' had three unlockable minigames.
67[[/folder]]
68
69[[folder:Beat 'em Up]]
70* The entirety of ''VideoGame/NineteenEightyX'', in general. You're a lonely teen in the 1980s, and wanders into an arcade where you get to experience a bunch of games within the game, from a ''Final Fight''-inspired smackdown to a HorizontalScrollingShooter where you pilot a spaceship and a text-based RPG.
71* ''VideoGame/{{Bayonetta}}'' has "Angel Attack!", a shooting gallery game that Bayonetta can play between chapters, aiming at targets to earn points to get things like Lollipops and other PowerUps. By collecting Arcade Bullets during the actual chapter, you earn more shots in the game.
72* ''VideoGame/DynamiteDeka'' included the old Creator/{{Sega}} MediaNotes/ArcadeGame ''Deep Scan'', points from which could win more credits to play the main game. ''Dynamite Deka 2'' did the same thing with ''Tranquilizer Gun'', another old Sega arcade game. The Platform/PlayStation2 remake of the original game substituted a simulation of the electromechanical game ''Periscope'', the first coin-operated game Sega ever made.
73[[/folder]]
74
75[[folder:Edutainment]]
76* ''VideoGame/AdibooMagicalPlayland'': You can play minigames in Adiboo's house.
77* ''VideoGame/BrainAge 2'' contained Virus/Germ Buster, a touch-based remake of ''VideoGame/DrMario''. ''Brain Age: Concentration Training'' added Blob Blast, a touch-based remake of ''Wario's Woods'' (NES).
78[[/folder]]
79
80[[folder:Fighting]]
81* The ''VideoGame/StreetFighter6'' Battle Hub features an arcade corner. Fifteen classic Capcom arcade games (including [[EmbeddedPrecursor three iterations]] of ''VideoGame/StreetFighterII'') are in the rotation with three playable at a time. Standalone ''VideoGame/FinalFight'' and ''VideoGame/SonSon'' machines are found in World Tour, in Metro City and Nayshall.
82[[/folder]]
83
84[[folder:First Person Shooter]]
85* An interesting case, which may also be an example of MythologyGag: ''VideoGame/BlackMesa'' ran a contest in 2006 to let the community design the monitors scattered around the facility. [[http://web.archive.org/web/20091231133911/http://blackmesasource.com/media/community_projects/cp2_finalist4th.jpg One of the winners]] is the title screen of the original ''VideoGame/HalfLife''. ([[http://web.archive.org/web/20061212042049/http://blackmesasource.com/media/community_projects/cp2_finalist5th.jpg Another one]] is ''Videogame/CounterStrike''.)
86* In ''VideoGame/CallOfDutyBlackOps'' you can play a very old text-only adventure game ''VideoGame/{{Zork}} I'' on a terminal on the main menu screen as an EasterEgg.
87** In ''VideoGame/CallOfDutyBlackOpsII'', if you shoot off all the mannequin heads in Nuketown 2025, you can play old Activision games like ''Pitfall 2'' or ''Kaboom''!
88* The mid-90s Amiga FPS ''Gloom'' had an arcade machine on which a ''VideoGame/{{Defender}}'' clone could be played for one extra life.
89* The ''VideoGame/DeusEx'' mod VideoGame/TheNamelessMod included several minigames, like ''VideoGame/{{Tetris}}'' and ''VideoGame/{{Breakout}}'', that you could play on in-game computers.
90* ''VideoGame/Doom2016'' has two instances of this, with ''Super Turbo Turkey Puncher 3'' making a return and a ''Bejeweled'' clone using sprites from the original game.
91* ''VideoGame/Doom3'':
92** The original game includes an arcade game title ''Super Turbo Turkey Puncher 3'' where you [[ExactlyWhatItSaysOnTheTin punch lots of turkeys]]. Getting a high score earns you an achievement.
93** One enterprising [[GameMod modder]] took it a bit further with [[http://battleteam.net/tech/fis/ Terminal DOOM]], which ports the original game's engine to the ''Doom 3'' terminals.
94* Subverted in ''VideoGame/DukeNukem3D'': Upon confronting a ''Duke Nukem II'' arcade machine, Duke simply says, "[[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3IjLXvxFiMc Hmmm, don't have time to play with myself.]]" This joke is referenced in ''VideoGame/{{Dusk}}'', which features several computers displaying the player's first person perspective. Interacting with these computers causes the player to make a similar remark to Duke.
95* ''VideoGame/{{Fallout}}'':
96** In ''VideoGame/Fallout3'', one of the computers has a text adventure game called "Reign of Grelok" on it that you can play.
97** ''VideoGame/Fallout4'' has several holotape games that you can play on most hacked computer terminals as well as your Pip-Boy and your real-world smartphone with the Pip-Boy app. Included are ''VideoGame/SpaceInvaders'', ''VideoGame/MissileCommand'', ''VideoGame/DonkeyKong'', and ''VideoGame/{{Pitfall}}'' expies, and a Grognak the Barbarian text-based RPG. The ''Automatron'' DLC adds a ''VideoGame/Robotron2084'' clone.
98* ''VideoGame/HomefrontTheRevolution'' has a hidden arcade cabinet in one of the levels, which when activated will launch a fully functional port of ''VideoGame/TimeSplitters2''. Only the first two levels are playable by default, but a CheatCode to unlock the complete game was eventually discovered.
99* ''VideoGame/JonathanKaneTheProtector'' have an area in the museum where Jonathan comes across a computer, and can play a spaceship game (loosely based on ''VideoGame/{{Galaxian}}'') on it. The game ends if he dies, playing it is entirely optional and doesn't affect the storyline in any way.
100* ''VideoGame/Left4Dead2'' has the sideshows in Dark Carnival. The Peanut Gallery, which is a shooting gallery (and unlocks the box with Gnome Chompski for an Achievement). There's Stache Whacker (a Whack-A-Mole game which, when beaten, would break the machine, spew winner tickets, and alert the horde as it dings happily). And there's the Strength Test which, when hit correctly, would knock the bell clean out and alert the horde. This one is also achievement-worthy.
101* In ''VideoGame/Prey2006'', the bar where the game starts features a playable video poker machine and an arcade game loosely based on Pac-Man. Later on the player can stumble across the video poker machine on the alien space ship with the minor change that you can win every single round because the game will always deal the best possible hand based on whatever cards you've held.
102* ''VideoGame/SeriousSam4'' includes a side mission where the player sits at a computer and plays through a fantasy themed text based adventure.
103* ''VideoGame/Sharpshooter3D'', where your enemies are human gangsters and corrupt cops, has a secret area where you can actiate a console and play a different FPS game altogether, a sci-fi ''Doom'' clone filled with green mutants. You're a Terminator-like robot in the sub-game, for good measure.
104* In ''VideoGame/SystemShock'', the [[PlayerCharacter PC]] finds data cubes in {{Cyberspace}} containing useful programs and games, which you can play in your interface, including ''[[VideoGame/{{Pong}} Ping]]'', ''Eel Zapper'', ''Wing 0'', ''[[FifteenPuzzle 15]]'' and ''[=BotBounce=]''. In ''VideoGame/SystemShock2'', the [=GamePig=] Entertainment Device is an MFD Game Player that can run games from memory sticks found around the ''Von Braun'', or you can hack it to access all the games at once: ''Corporate Swine'', ''Golf'', ''[=OverWorld Zero=]'', ''Swine Hunter'', ''Swinekeeper'', ''Street Hog'', and ''Tic-Tac-Triop''.
105* ''VideoGame/TimeSplitters2'' had three games that could be found (via cartridges hidden in levels in story mode) that could be accessed by pressing the reload button with the Temporal Uplink out.
106* A MythologyGag version shows up in ''VideoGame/TronTwoPointOh''. In the opening scene, the protagonist is shown playing the ''VideoGame/{{Tron}}'' arcade game. Explained in-universe as Flynn making a game based on his adventures down the digital rabbit hole (like much of the game,the same explanation got recycled into ''Film/TronLegacy'').
107* ''VideoGame/WolfensteinIITheNewColossus'' has ''Wolfstone 3D'', a [[PerspectiveFlip Perspective Flipped]] version of the original ''VideoGame/Wolfenstein3D'': instead of playing as William Blazkowicz fighting his way through Nazis to kill Hitler, players take on the role of a Nazi soldier fighting past rebels to kill "Terror Billy".
108[[/folder]]
109
110[[folder:Hack and Slash]]
111* ''VideoGame/NinjaGaiden'' for the Xbox has an arcade machine that can play the NES ''Ninja Gaiden'' trilogy, if you can find the cartridges, that is. The UpdatedRerelease also includes the original arcade game.
112[[/folder]]
113
114[[folder:Idle Game]]
115* ''VideoGame/TheCommunitree'': ''Giftcode Hunter'' is a text adventure purchasable for 1e188 gift points, where you have to type in commands suggested by the game to progress the story about finding more giftcodes and ultimately finishing the section.
116[[/folder]]
117
118[[folder:[=MMORPG=]]]
119* ''VideoGame/ClubPenguin'':
120** One of the rooms was the Arcade, where you could play the in-universe arcade games ''Astro Barrier'', ''Thin Ice'', and ''Bits & Bolts''.
121** The spy missions are all minigames anyway, but in one mission, an arcade game was yet another minigame, making it a game within a game within a game.
122* ''VideoGame/EverQuest'' had "Gems" -- a ''VideoGame/{{Bejeweled}}'' knockoff to pass the time while meditating/healing/looking for group.
123* ''VideoGame/FinalFantasyXIV'' has, among the myriad attractions at the Manderville Gold Saucer, ''Lord of Verminion'', a RealTimeStrategy minigame loosely based on ''Anime/LordOfVermilion'' where players use their collected minions as game pieces as they attempt to take their opponent's base.
124* ''VideoGame/GuildWars2'' has the limited-time event "Super Adventure Box", a homage to both [[NintendoHard Nintendo's golden days]] and [[PlatformHell their modern descendants]].
125* ''VideoGame/PhantasyStarOnline2'' is a game that can say that it features ''[[MindScrew itself]]'' as a GameWithinAGame. What sets this apart from other, similar examples is that the game co-exists with the universe that the real game is set in. The in-story version is almost identical to the real thing, but the in-story version is [[spoiler:developed by the NebulousEvilOrganization Mother Cluster to spy on the ParallelUniverse that the PlayerCharacter and ARKS resides in. The avatars that players make in the game manifest as Ether constructs in the ARKS dimension, and depending on the Ether potential of the user, it's possible for Earthlings to "dive" into their avatar and experience the game through them, or outright use ''Phantasy Star Online 2'' as an interdimensional portal to send themselves to the other dimension.]]
126* A large chunk of ''VideoGame/RuneScape'''s content consists of minigames, of which here are over 60.
127* ''VideoGame/WorldOfWarcraft'' has the various games of the Darkmoon Faire, with such classics as Whack-a-Gnoll, Tonk Commander, race courses with four different vehicles, and a shooting gallery. Playing the games awards no gold or XP, but instead a selection of single-use toys and tickets for prizes. Given the selection of mounts, cosmetic armor, and toys available [[SidetrackedByTheGoldSaucer players may spend a lot of time at the Faire when it's open]].
128** ''Cataclysm'' introduced the [[VideoGame/PlantsVsZombies Peacebloom Vs Ghouls]] quest chain. Once completed it unlocks a daily quest to play the game again for gold.
129** ''Legion'' introduced two toys which allow the player to play a mini-game. [[PunnyName Jewelcraft]] is, unsurprisingly, a ''Bejeweled'' clone whose only reward is an achievement for getting enough points. The Blingtron Circuit Tutorial is an alleged HackingMinigame where you have to uncross all the lines connecting a series of fixed points; it also awards only an achievement.
130[[/folder]]
131
132[[folder:Platform Game]]
133* In ''VideoGame/BanjoKazooieNutsAndBolts'', you can go to Klungo's Arcade and play his masterpiece, "Hero Klungo Sssavesss Teh World", an eight-bit {{Self Insert|Fic}} platformer where the ''entire'' control system is a single button. And it [[StylisticSuck regularly crashes]], prompting Klungo to appear and reboot it for you. A later DLC pack unlocked the sequel: "Hero Klungo Sssavesss Teh Universsse", which added a gun to Klungo's arsenal.
134* In several of the ''VideoGame/CommanderKeen'' games, the player can play "Paddle War", a ''VideoGame/{{Pong}}'' clone, on the player's [=ComputerWrist=].
135* ''VideoGame/DonkeyKong64'' has two minigames to obtain the Rareware and the Nintendo Coins. Cranky offers you ''VideoGame/{{Jetpac}}'' as a example of the good past times in videogames. The other game is the original ''VideoGame/DonkeyKong'' game, in a Arcade placed in one of the levels. These are not optional, however; you have to play through both of these NintendoHard games to get into the room that unlocks the final boss fight.
136* In ''VideoGame/DuckDodgersStarringDaffyDuck'', A VideoGame/{{Pong}}-like game can be played against an AI opponent in the arcade in Downtown Landing.
137* In ''VideoGame/GanbareGoemon: Legend of the Mystical Ninja'', the Creator/{{Konami}} theme park level has an attraction that lets you play the first level of ''VideoGame/{{Gradius}}''.
138* Hero 3D in ''VideoGame/{{Iji}}'' is accessed from an in-game computer terminal.
139* ''VideoGame/GreyArea2023'': In the hidden sewer area in Chapter 2, you can pick up Hailey's Game Bean, a portable game console. Sitting down for a few seconds (by pressing down) will eventually cause Hailey to pull out the Game Bean and start playing ''Pyo'', a minigame (which was made by one of the game's staff before ''Grey Area'' came out but was incorporated into it) in which a chicken jumps around and collects seeds.
140* The ''VideoGame/MegaManClassic''-esque free platformer ''VideoGame/KhimeraDestroyAllMonsterGirls'' features "Cakeboy", a simple platformer with NES-inspired graphics that can be played on the console at the protagonist's home. It actually gives you a Steam achievement and an item that is needed for HundredPercentCompletion if you beat enough levels.
141* In ''VideoGame/MegaManZX'', there's an arcade in the city where Vent/Aile can play some minigames.
142* In the HubLevel of ''VideoGame/PacManAndTheGhostlyAdventures'', there are several arcade machines that can only be played with a sufficient amount of the corresponding fruit. There's a bit of FridgeLogic when you see that said hub is Pac's high school -- wouldn't the staff worry about students getting distracted in the halls?
143* ''VideoGame/PitfallTheLostExpedition'' had both the original ''VideoGame/{{Pitfall}}'' (also included in ''VideoGame/Pitfall3DBeyondTheJungle'') and ''Pitfall II: The Lost Caverns'' as bonuses.
144* ''Franchise/RatchetAndClank'':
145** Using the Dynamo on the pyramid in Clank's apartment in ''VideoGame/RatchetAndClankGoingCommando'' will let you play a Space Invaders-style game.
146** ''VideoGame/RatchetAndClankUpYourArsenal'' had the Captain Qwark Vid-comics, which are a side-scroller similar to ''Franchise/MegaMan''.
147** ''VideoGame/RatchetAndClankFutureACrackInTime'' features ''My Blaster Runs Hot'', an arcade game you can play which is ''VideoGame/{{Robotron 2084}}'' with Captain Qwark and Rusty Pete as the characters.
148* ''VideoGame/SonicGenerations'' has a Sega Genesis in the hub for GreenHillZone that lets you play the original ''VideoGame/SonicTheHedgehog1'', but you'll need to buy the controller for the Genesis from the Skill Shop first. You can also buy unlimited continues for it.
149* ''VideoGame/{{Zool}}'' had an arcade machine on one level that allowed the player to play a simplified version of Zool itself. The twist was that the machine was gigantic, requiring Zool to jump about on the huge buttons in order to control his own avatar.
150[[/folder]]
151
152[[folder:Puzzle Game]]
153* ''VideoGame/{{Catherine}}'' has ''Rapunzel'', an arcade game in the Stray Sheep with eerily similar mechanics to the nightmares but the time limit replaced with a movement limit. [[spoiler:In fact, its similarity to the nightmares is why it was put there.]]
154* ''VideoGame/{{EXAPUNKS}}'' builds on the developer's experience with the aforementioned ''Shenzhen I/O'' and letting you make your own games and puts in an entire fictional game console to program, and unlike the former game, it is far more generous with the programming limitations. There are also a couple of in-universe games to play on other systems as well: a Russian solitaire game for your desktop and a Japanese arcade/puzzle game called ''Hack*match'' for another fictional console. The former is downloaded in one of the missions, while the latter is a gift from your neighbour, which she couldn't get to work due to the region locking on the console. You get it working anyway by bypassing the region locking in one of the game's puzzles. Custom games can be shared with other players by exporting them as an image of a cartridge.
155* ''VideoGame/OpusMagnum'' continues ''Shenzhen I/O's'' tradition of including a game and includes one called Sigmar's Garden, which in-universe is loosely based on the game's alchemy, with the goal of clearing the board of coloured balls. Your character isn't too keen on the liberties taken with the game's depiction of alchemy, given he does the real thing in the actual levels.
156* ''VideoGame/PacMan2TheNewAdventures'' features an arcade in both the countryside and the city. The arcade contains both the original ''Pac-Man'' and ''Ms. Pac-Man''. The Platform/SegaGenesis version of the game replaces ''Ms. Pac-Man'' with a new game called ''[[SpinOffspring Pac-Jr.]]'' (not to be confused with the Bally-Midway produced ''Jr. Pac-Man''), since ''Ms. Pac-Man'' had already been released on the Genesis as a standalone game. Both ''Ms. Pac-Man'' and ''Pac-Jr.'' require three cartridge pieces in order to play.
157* ''VideoGame/{{Safecracker}}'' has ''VideoGame/{{Minesweeper}}'' on an in-game computer.
158* ''VideoGame/ShenzhenIO'' gives you the tools to ''make'' one. Your colleagues encourage you to try your hand at it in prototyping mode (basically the equivalent of SandboxMode in other games). Given the limitations of the hardware you have to work with, it's easier said than done, though the game does provide a feature for making your own custom LCD for it. It also includes an in-universe solitaire game written by one of your colleagues' kids to play when you need a break from programming.
159* Try summoning an "ARCADE MACHINE" in ''VideoGame/SuperScribblenauts''.
160[[/folder]]
161
162[[folder:Racing Game]]
163* ''VideoGame/ProjectGothamRacing 2'' had ''Geometry Wars'' in it. Later ''PGR'' games have their own editions/sequels of ''Geometry Wars''
164[[/folder]]
165
166[[folder:Real Time Strategy]]
167* ''VideoGame/StarCraftIIWingsOfLiberty''[='s=] Campaign Mode features an arcade machine with ''The Lost Vikings'' on it. Not ''[[VideoGame/TheLostVikings that]]'' Lost Vikings though, it is a Space Shooter entirely made within the capabilities of the map editor.
168[[/folder]]
169
170[[folder:Role Playing Game]]
171* ''[[https://store.steampowered.com/app/1093300/NOYO/ NOYO-!]]'', a JRPG heavily inspired by ''[=EarthBound=]'', has a Famicom-esque console in the main character's room that lets you play a ''Space Invaders'' clone.
172* ''VideoGame/{{Anachronox}}'' has this in the form of game cartridges that can be played on a machine back in Boots' office.
173* ''VideoGame/BugFables'': In Chapter 6, after the Ant and Termite Kingdoms reestablish relationships, a Termacade is opened in the Ant Kingdom, allowing Team Snakemouth to play two arcade games: "Flower Journey" (a clone of ''VideoGame/FlappyBird'') and "Mite Knight" (a TwoPointFiveD MazeGame). The player can earn tokens from the Termacade games that can be redeemed for prizes.
174* The ''Franchise/DotHack'' series revolves around ''The World'', a fictional MMORPG that serves as the series's main setting.
175* ''Franchise/FinalFantasy'':
176** ''VideoGame/FinalFantasyVII'' has the arcade games found in the [[MinigameZone Gold Saucer]], some of which curiously parallel events that actually happen to your team. For example, there's a motorbike racing game, which uses the exact same graphics as an actual motorbike chase that your team goes through earlier in the game.
177** ''VideoGame/FinalFantasyXV'' has ''Justice Monsters Five'' and ''[[VideoGame/KingsKnight King's Knight: Wrath of the Dark Dragon]]'', which turned into this trope when Square Enix released the game for [=iOS=] and Android devices in several regions.
178* ''VideoGame/GenshinImpact'' version 3.3 introduces Genius Invokation TCG, an in-universe CardBattleGame which can be played against either in-game characters or other real-life players.
179* ''Franchise/KingdomHearts'':
180** ''VideoGame/KingdomHeartsBirthBySleep'' contains the Command Board, which takes all of the gameplay and rules of Square Enix's ''VideoGame/FortuneStreet'' boardgame videogame series and mixes them with this game's characters and settings.
181** ''VideoGame/KingdomHeartsIII'' has {{Retraux}}-style games in the style of ''VideoGame/GameAndWatch'' video games that Sora plays on his phone. The world based on ''Franchise/ToyStory'' also has the cast visit a video game store filled with fictional games, including one that Sora [[TrappedInTVLand physically enters]], a first-person shooter about robots called ''Verum Rex: Beat of Lead''.
182* ''VideoGame/TheLegendOfHeroesTrails'' has "Pom-Pom Party" which is a mostly similar to ''VideoGame/PuyoPuyo''. Though, finding and beating each opponent grants special items.
183* "Captain Square" in ''VideoGame/LiveALive'' is an interesting twist - it's ostensibly an arcade game, but it plays exactly the same as normal battles do. There are, however, no normal battles in the same chapter that take place outside it. [[spoiler:The Odio counterpart for that chapter is even fought using the game as a medium, since destroying its physical form would doom the entire ship.]]
184* In ''VideoGame/MarvelUltimateAlliance'', you get trapped in Murderworld for one level. During said level you get to play games like ''Pitfall'' and ''{{VideoGame/Breakout}}''.
185* ''VideoGame/MassEffect3'' features an arcade in the "Citadel" DLC with a slew of playable games, including a crane game, "Shattered Eezo" (a rudimentary fighting game), and "Relay Defense" (a mix of Whack-a-Mole and tower defense games). There is also a virtual reality MonsterArena where you can fight enemies you've encountered in the game ([[MirrorMatch or even yourself]]) with any of your squadmates, including a few who aren't even selectable teammates in normal gameplay in ''3''.
186* ''VideoGame/MoonRemixRPGAdventure'' is a 1997 game about a boy who plays a new RPG called ''Moon'' and gets dragged into its virtual world. This also makes it an early example of an {{Isekai}}.
187* ''VideoGame/SDSnatcher'' features "Snatcher Headhunter", a Whack-A-Mole arcade game, which needs to be played for {{Plot Coupon}}s.
188* In ''VideoGame/ShinMegamiTenseiIIINocturne'', the arcade in Asakusa has a Manikin kid who dares you to complete all twenty levels of ''Puzzle Boy'' (a Platform/GameBoy version of which was the first game ever published by Creator/{{Atlus}}).
189* One of the side quests in ''VideoGame/SouthParkTheFracturedButWhole'' has you play Flappy Bird. Except the Bird in question is a rainbow-farting unicorn with a dead fish on top of it. And Beezlebub comes to shoot fire at you.
190* ''Franchise/SuperMarioBros'':
191** In ''VideoGame/SuperMarioRPGLegendOfTheSevenStars'', you can buy a Game Boy off a guy in Mushroom Kingdom and start playing ''Beetle Mania''.
192** In ''VideoGame/MarioAndLuigiSuperstarSaga'', you can play ''Star Stache Smash'' at the arcade in Little Fungitown. The first time you play that game, it's actually a plot point.
193* ''VideoGame/TalesOf''
194** ''VideoGame/TalesOfTheAbyss'' had the classic first generation side-scroller ''Dragon Buster'' as an unlockable bonus.
195** In ''VideoGame/TalesOfVesperia'', the player can engage in an arcade game on Nam Cobanda Isle called "Tales of Draspi."
196* ''VideoGame/TokyoXanadu'' contains several playable side-games at the arcade, featuring characters from ''VideoGame/TheLegendOfHeroesTrailsOfColdSteel''.
197* ''VideoGame/{{Ultima}}'' references the game ''Ultima V'' as a poster in ''Ultima VI'', and posters in ''Ultima Underworld II'' reference previous Ultima games. ''Ultima VII's'' intro shows The Avatar playing a "normal" ''Ultima VII'' game that becomes possessed by The Guardian. In ''Ultima VII,'' ''Ultima VIII'' appears as a pirated game on an anachronistic computer. In ''Ultima IX'', a preview of ''Ultima Online 2'' is found on The Avatar's home PC.
198* Tin Pin Slammer in ''VideoGame/TheWorldEndsWithYou''. Another Day is all about that.
199** ''VideoGame/NEOTheWorldEndsWithYou'' has Tin Pin Slammer go out of style, but gets replacements in mobile games ''Elegant Strategy'' and ''[[Franchise/FinalFantasy Fantasy]][[VideoGame/PokemonGo GO]]''. The former is played by Nagi to an almost unhealthy degree, while the latter is played extensively by Rindo [[spoiler:and Shoka]].
200* [[GadgeteerGenius Tora]] in ''VideoGame/XenobladeChronicles2'' developed an 8-bit game in his house called 'Tiger! Tiger!', which you'll need to play a lot of if you want to [[PointBuildSystem finetune]] [[RobotGirl Poppi's]] capabilities. In it, you play as a Nopon salvager, evading or subduing obstacles to gather treasure chests and ether crystals before returning to the surface (and everything you gather in a winning run, you get to keep for use with the Poppiswap system). Apparently, some other people in Gormott (and even on other Titans!) have also played it themselves, and will tell you what their own high score is if you talk to them.
201* ''VideoGame/{{Xenosaga}} Episode III'' had HAKOX, an arcade game. The player is required to play it for a while at one point of the game for the main story to progress.
202* NASU (the most depressing game in the universe) for the NES in ''VideoGame/YumeNikki''.
203** The spin-off game ''-DREAM DIARY-'' introduces three more, Super NASU, Witch Adventure, and [[spoiler:''VideoGame/AoOni'']].
204[[/folder]]
205
206[[folder:Simulation Game]]
207* ''Videogame/AnimalCrossing'':
208** ''VideoGame/AnimalCrossing2001'' on the [=GameCube=] contains an astonishing 19 fully-playable NES games. Each ROM is represented in game by dedicated NES consoles, and they are acquired through various methods:
209*** ''Balloon Fight'', ''Clu Clue Land'', ''Donkey Kong'', ''Donkey Kong Jr. Math'', ''Excitebike'', ''Golf'', ''Pinball'', and ''Tennis'' can be obtained via Nook's Lottery, Redd, or buried by the town's denizens.
210*** ''Wario's Woods'' and ''Baseball'' may be obtained as items on the island, accessed by linking with a Game Boy Advance.
211*** ''Soccer'', ''Donkey Kong Jr.'', ''Donkey Kong 3'', ''Clu Clu Land D'', and ''Punch-Out!!'' were only officially obtainable via promotional Nintendo giveaways, but may be acquired through their access codes or cheat devices.
212*** ''Mario Bros.'' and ''Ice Climber'' are officially obtainable via e-Reader cards, but may also be acquired through cheating devices.
213*** ''Super Mario Bros.'' was only unlockable in the Japanese version through a Famitsu giveaway. ''The Legend of Zelda'' is in the game's code, but was never officially released; both of these titles can be obtained through cheating devices.
214** An update to ''VideoGame/AnimalCrossingNewLeaf'' added two minigames: Puzzle League, an ''Animal Crossing''-themed version of ''VideoGame/PanelDePon'', and Desert Island Escape, a direct port of one of the minigames from ''amiibo Festival''. Completing certain objectives in these minigames will net you some exclusive furniture, and you can even get a [[VideoGame/PanelDePon Lip]] costume from the former, wand included.
215* ''VideoGame/IWasATeenageExocolonist'': In Nomi's ten-heart event, they write an interactive holonovel about you [[OrdinaryHighSchoolStudent as a high school girl destined to save the world from an alien invasion]] and let you playtest it. Like the main game, it has multiple branching paths that you can explore.
216* ''VideoGame/MySummerCar'' has games that can be played via a Mikropekka computer. For a full list of games see [[https://my-summer-car.fandom.com/wiki/Computer here]].
217** The games cannot be played if the game is downloaded as a [[NoFairCheating pirate]] version rather than downloading from the official Steam page.
218** The [[JokeItem joke game]] Conan [=McGuinness=] Global Rally Grand Prix 95 released in April Fools 2021 cannot be played at all due to insufficient memory in the said computer. The menus are the only working part of the game. Attempting to play the game it crashes or freezes depending the graphics with the latter awards you with an [[AchievementMockery mockery achievement]].
219* ''VideoGame/StardewValley'' has two arcade games at the Stardrop Saloon. ''Journey of the Prairie King'' is a shoot-'em-up where you play a cowboy fighting off hordes of monsters (it also has a home version that you play with Abigail during one of her friendship events), and ''Junimo Kart'' is an EndlessRunningGame unlocked with the Skull Key found at the lowest level of the caves.
220* ''VideoGame/{{Thrillville}}'': In both games, the items you can place in your parks include arcade games, which are playable minigames.
221* The ''VisualNovel/TokimekiMemorial'' series ''loves'' this trope:
222** The first game has a ''VideoGame/{{Twinbee}} Time Attack'' minigame.
223** The second game has ''Circus de Aimashou'', a remake of {{Creator/Konami}}'s old game ''Circus Charlie''.
224** ''Tokimeki Memorial Pocket'' has a ''VideoGame/{{Beatmania}}'' minigame.
225** ''Dancing Summer Vacation'' is built around the ''VideoGame/DanceDanceRevolution Tokimeki Mix'' minigame.
226** Several games of the series have original ShootEmUp minigames such as ''Force Gear'', ''Stardust Symphony EX'' and ''Psyth'' (in ''1''), ''Star Crusher'' (in ''Tabidachi no Uta''), ''Space Ring Fighter'' and ''Melting Point'' (in ''2''), and ''Go-Driller'' (in ''Leaping School Festival'').
227[[/folder]]
228
229[[folder:Sports Game]]
230* If you work your number of strokes up past 100 in ''Arnold Palmer's Tournament Golf'' on Genesis, you unlock a short playable segment of ''VideoGame/FantasyZone''.
231* ''VideoGame/GolfStory'' has ''Galf'' (no, that's not a typo), which is [[{{Retraux}} designed to replicate the look and feel of NES golf games]]. You have to find the game cartridge, and then show it to a particular NPC, who will then let you play it on his console. Like the main game itself, it's a golf game, but as an NES-like game it comes with many of the restrictions of NES-era games, such as only being allowed to shoot in 16 directions and the camera being stuck in an overhead view of the entire course until you get to the green. Fulfilling further sidequests will earn you ''Galf Seasons'' and ''Galf Nights'', which are [[MissionPackSequel the same game but with different courses]].
232* From ''[[VideoGame/LivePowerfulProBaseball Live Powerful Pro Baseball 3]]'' on, Konami began inserting robust VisualNovel scenarios in their Baseball simulators. The ''Pocket'' spinoffs for Nintendo's portables then went further than that, as in many of them you could unlock a whole new story that had nothing to do with the main one and was either a ''VideoGame/{{Minesweeper}}'' game for ''VideoGame/PowerProKunPocket2'' and ''VideoGame/PowerProKunPocket3'', a JRPG, a roguelike or even a trading card game.
233[[/folder]]
234
235[[folder:Survival Horror]]
236* ''VideoGame/TheEvilWithin2'' has a shooting gallery with two modes: A standard police shooting range and a ''Candy Crush'' variant.
237* In ''VideoGame/TheGoodGrimaceShakeHorrorGame'', one of the items you have is a handheld console containing a platformer minigame where you play as Grimace collecting Grimace Shakes while avoiding [[SpikesOfDoom deadly spikes]]. Completing the levels in this minigame is necessary to find out where to go in the main game.
238* ''VideoGame/{{Penumbra}}: Black Plague'' includes a shooter minigame in one of the PC's.
239* In ''VideoGame/Siren2'', there is ''Kunitoris'' ([[CountryMatters Country Tetris]]), a Famicom-style puzzle strategy game for the [=SN-AG1999 AGE MANIAC=] game system. In ''Siren: Blood Curse'', there are the ''Platform/GameAndWatch''-style games ''Jackalopeman'', ''Skyfish'', and ''{{Tsuchinoko}}'' on the [=JOYLiNK=] Ultra Network King portable LCD game system.
240* In ''VideoGame/UltimateCustomNight'', Toy Freddy doesn't go after you, preferring to play ''Five Nights at Mr. Hugs''. There are three possible doors that Mr. Hugs might be at, and only one can be closed at a time. This is important, because Toy Freddy is an absolutely terrible gamer, so you have to watch out for Mr. Hugs for him. If he gets jumpscared, he'll leave to jumpscare ''you'', and there's nothing you can do to stop him.
241[[/folder]]
242
243[[folder:Third Person Shooter]]
244* ''VideoGame/JetForceGemini'' has at least one instance of this in one of the later levels, involving an arcade machine where you play a top-down racer against the AI. Tokens are even necessary to play it.
245* ''VideoGame/SecondSight'' had two games (which could be played on the PDA/Pause Menu), one found as a cartridge and another by playing on an arcade machine.
246* ''Franchise/{{Splatoon}}'':
247** ''VideoGame/Splatoon1'' features an 8-bit minigame called "Squid Jump" (wherein you make a squid... [[ExactlyWhatItSaysOnTheTin jump]]) that you can play while waiting between matches or on an arcade machine in the HubWorld. Completing amiibo challenges unlocks three additional minigames: "Squid Racer", a top-down racing game; "Squid Beatz", a simple rhythm game; and "Squid Ball", a bizarre mix of volleyball and bowling.
248** ''VideoGame/Splatoon2'' only features one minigame in the form of "Squid Beatz 2", a ''VideoGame/TaikoNoTatsujin''-style rhythm game that doubles as a sound test. Songs from the first game can also be unlocked via amiibo.
249** ''VideoGame/Splatoon3'' has Table Turf Battle, a competitive CardBattleGame where each player uses decks of cards to emulate Turf War battles. In addition to this, the ''Side Order'' DLC campaign [[spoiler:also counts as this, taking place a virtual reality version of Inkopolis Square that Marina created to gamify the process of recovering sanitized Octolings' memories]].
250* In ''VideoGame/Uncharted4AThiefsEnd'', Nathan attempts to beat Elena's high score on ''Videogame/{{Crash Bandicoot|1996}}'', specifically, the [[IndyEscape Boulders]] level. You later replay the game during the epilogue as [[spoiler:Nate and Elena's teenage daughter.]]
251* The Platform/Xbox360 version of ''VideoGame/GhostbustersTheVideoGame'' allows the player to play ''VideoGame/QBert''. It's one of the arcade machines at the firehouse.
252[[/folder]]
253
254[[folder:Wide Open Sandbox]]
255* ''VideoGame/{{Bully}}'' had several with names like "Nut Shots", "Monkey Fling", "Consumo" and "Future Street Race". The last one also has a more modern 3D version available to play in-game.
256* In ''VideoGame/GoatSimulator'', there is ''Flappy Goat'', ''Drug Wars'', ''Box Pusher'', and ''Snake'', playable on a flat screen TV.
257* ''VideoGame/GrandTheftAutoOnline'' has arcades which the player can buy playable arcade games for. They can range from a Blaster Master clone game like ''Invade and Persuade II'' to a Castlevania clone game like ''Wizard's Ruin'' to even the trilogy of [=''Race'N'Chase''=] racing series based in ''Hang On'' and ''VideoGame/OutRun''.
258** The Invade And Persuade II even contains a KonamiCode that gives you 99 lives.
259** For Halloween events it features ''CAMHEDZ'' which is a [[GameMod ROM hack]] from the light gun game ''Badlands Revenge'' which changes from a [[GenreShift wild west game to an horror game based in]] ''{{VideoGame/Manhunt}}''.
260* ''VideoGame/GrandTheftAutoSanAndreas'' had clones of ''VideoGame/{{Tempest}}'', ''VideoGame/{{Asteroids}}'' and ''VideoGame/{{Defender}}'' (''Go Go Space Monkey'', ''Let's Get Ready to Bumble'', ''Duality'', and ''They Crawled from Uranus''). You could also play billiards at one of the local bars.
261%%* ''Grand Theft Auto IV/V'' has the puzzle game [=QUB3D=].
262* ''VideoGame/NoMoreHeroes'':
263** In the first game; whilst travelling via train during one of his missions, Travis pulls out a hand-held console and starts playing Pure White Tiny Giant Glastonbury (which itself is a spin-off of a fictional anime Travis is obsessed with). Once the game is complete, the mission continues and the game is unlocked at his home for future playing.
264** ''VideoGame/NoMoreHeroes2DesperateStruggle'' has "Bizzare Jelly 5", a spin-off of the anime, that you can play from the start of the game.
265** ''VideoGame/NoMoreHeroesIII'' features ''Deathman'', a faux-8-bit beat-em-up. Two segments of the game are played through in the main story, once in the prologue and again after the #2 rank battle. The full game itself can be unlocked.
266* You can go into the main character's crib in ''VideoGame/SaintsRow2'' and play a console video game called Zombie Invasion.
267* ''VideoGame/{{Shenmue}}'' had ''VideoGame/SpaceHarrier'' and ''Hang-On'' in it. ''Shenmue II'' had those two with ''VideoGame/AfterBurner II'' and ''VideoGame/OutRun''.
268* The ''Videogame/{{Yakuza}}'' series being a SpiritualSuccessor of sorts to ''Shenmue'', this trope had to kick in eventually. Aside from fully playable games of shogi, mahjong and assorted Japanese games of chance, there's:
269** The original ''VideoGame/Yakuza2'' features the first person lightsaber fighting game ''[=YF6=]'' that Kiryu could play in certain arcades. One substory required Kiryu to lose on purpose as well.
270** ''VideoGame/Yakuza3'', ''[[VideoGame/Yakuza4 4]]'' and ''[[VideoGame/YakuzaDeadSouls Dead Souls]]'' feature ''Boxcelios'', a space shooter all about racking up points by shooting enemies in their cores.
271** ''VideoGame/Yakuza5'' has an ArcadePerfectPort of ''VideoGame/VirtuaFighter'' 2 that even supports online play (though you need to download a separate software to go online), in addition to a port of ''VideoGame/TaikoNoTatsujin'' (albeit with only three songs) and ana ll new shooter game called ''Gunrhein.''
272** ''VideoGame/Yakuza0'' has, much like ''Shenmue'', certain Sega arcade classics available to play, namely ''VideoGame/SpaceHarrier'', ''VideoGame/OutRun'', ''VideoGame/FantasyZone'' and ''[[VideoGame/HangOn Super Hang-On]]''. Appropriately for its time period, they're all in Club Sega's predecessor, Hi-Tech Sega Land.
273** ''VideoGame/Yakuza6'', in addition to the retro titles from ''0'', includes ''VideoGame/VirtuaFighter 5: Final Showdown'' and ''VideoGame/PuyoPuyo''.
274** ''[[VideoGame/Yakuza1 Yakuza Kiwami]]'' has ''Battle Bug Beauties: Mesuking,'' a rock-paper-scissors game starring bikini clad women embodying various insects, which is based on the actual Sega arcade game ''VideoGame/KouchuuOujaMushiking'' while recycling assets from the catfight minigame from ''0''.
275** ''[[VideoGame/Yakuza2 Yakuza Kiwami 2]]'' replaces [=YF6=] with an ArcadePerfectPort of ''VideoGame/VirtualOn'' as well as the returning ''Virtua Fighter 2''.
276** Even the licensed SpinOff ''VideoGame/FistOfTheNorthStarLostParadise'' has playable retro games to salvage from the wastelands, namely ''VideoGame/SpaceHarrier'', ''VideoGame/OutRun'', ''[[VideoGame/HangOn Super Hang-On]]'', and even the original Master Sytem version of ''Fist of the North Star'' (which had been released overseas as ''Black Belt'') as an EmbeddedPrecursor.
277** ''VideoGame/{{Judgment}}'' retains ''Space Harrier'', ''Fantasy Zone'', ''Puyo Puyo'', and ''Virtua Fighter 5: Final Showdown'' while also adding ''VideoGame/FightingVipers'' and the previously Japan-exclusive ''[[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Motor_Raid Motor Raid]]''. In addition, there is a retro-style pinball machine and an original rail-shooter minigame called ''Kamuro of the Dead'', a homage to ''VideoGame/HouseOfTheDead'' set in ''VideoGame/YakuzaDeadSouls''.
278** ''VideoGame/LostJudgment'' has ''VideoGame/SonicTheFighters'' as part of Franchise/SonicTheHedgehog's [[MilestoneCelebration 30th anniversary]]. Yagami's office also includes a Master System with eight games you can find for it: ''[[VideoGame/AlexKidd Alex Kidd in Miracle World]]'', ''Enduro Racer'', ''Penguin Land'', ''VideoGame/FantasyZone'', ''Woody Pop'', ''Quartet'', ''Maze Hunter 3D'' and ''Secret Command''. DLC adds another four: ''Fantasy Zone II'', ''Sagaia'', ''SDI'' and ''Alien Syndrome''.
279[[/folder]]
280
281[[folder:Unsorted]]
282* The Israeli video game ''Tchachei Harating'' has a couple of arcade consoles in the lower floor of the hotel, where you can play, for instance, a karate fighting game.
283* In Lemony Snicket's ''Literature/ASeriesOfUnfortunateEvents'' for the Game Boy Advance, an arcade machine is located in the town of Lake Lachrymose. Playing it gives you the 'Handsome Man' video game, where you turn sad faces into happy faces. A rain cloud always comes along and changes them back though; you cannot win the game and all the happy faces will eventually be sad again.
284* ''Monty Python's Complete Waste of Time'' contains a maze game hidden in an activity center filled with references to ''Series/MontyPythonsFlyingCircus''.
285* ''VideoGame/PresentableLiberty'' features the "Doctor Money Portable Entertainment Product" that can run up to five different minigames. Most of them [[StylisticSuck are intentionally bad]], but they help pass the time between story segments. Finishing them nets you [[CosmeticAward medals]] to hang on your cell wall.
286* Activision's ''VideoGame/BattleZone1998'' [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7VxcqB428so 1998]] and Space Invaders [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6wQG8-NsGhY 1999]] both imply the original games serve as interfaces within the more modern looking vehicles/space craft.
287* ''VideoGame/WarioWare'' is a game series about a game company making large quantities of "microgames" (MediaNotes/{{Shovelware}}). There are some original games, and many ports, knockoffs and sub-par clones of other games by Nintendo during the NES era, especially ''VideoGame/SuperMarioBros1''. The "Fly Swatter" game from the SNES ''VideoGame/MarioPaint'' is also included, and, in ''[[VideoGame/WarioWareIncMegaMicrogames Mega Microgame$!]]'', there's even a [[ShoddyKnockoffProduct bootleg]]-themed ''VideoGame/DrMario'' clone labelled ''Dr. Wario''. In ''VideoGame/WarioWareTwisted'', the last minigame you can unlock is ''[=WarioWare=] Twisted'' itself... which just resets the game with a Wario-themed variation on the GBA startup screen. Meanwhile, in ''VideoGame/WarioWareGold'', you can unlock viewable models of various [=3DS=] systems, and even turn them on and play a selection of microgames by tapping the on-screen A button.
288* VideoGame/{{SeGaGaGa}} (SGGG) is a Sega Dreamcast RPG about running a game development studio. The game development and publishing simulation aspects feature Sega games being sold to the public to gain greater market share. The RPG portions appear to be game aspects coming to life within the office environment.
289* ''Film/FinalDeployment4QueenBattleWalkthrough'' features multiple games within games, as each character makes their own video game {{walkthrough}}.
290* The InteractiveFiction series of ''Unnkulian Unventures'' games went meta in its final installment, ''The Legend Lives!'' The original games which focused on a medieval world were revealed to be an in-universe game series which, much like the actual series, never had a full third installment. A major plot point is that the player character has obtained the only copy of an incomplete build of the third game which must eventually be played in-game.
291* ''198X'' can be described as an interactive movie, that is half voiced cutscenes and half minigames that represent the arcade games the protagonist is playing and which are somewhat related to what he is facing in his life at that moment. These minigames are inspired by popular genres and titles from the 80s, in order of appearance: ''Beating Heart'' (a beat-'em-up a la ''Streets of Rage''), ''Out of the Void'' (a horizontal shoot-'em-up), ''The Runaway'' (racing game a la ''[=OutRun=]''), ''Shadowplay'' (a platformer) and ''Kill Screen'' (a first-person dungeon crawler).
292* ''VisualNovel/Danganronpa2GoodbyeDespair'': Monokuma's second motive is a game called ''Twilight Syndrome Murder Mystery'' (apparently based on a popular in-universe game series). The game is a short one where several girls discuss two murders that happened in school. Hajime is unsure how it counts as a motive. [[spoiler: He only played one part of the game. The ''full'' game is a motive directly targeting Fuyuhiko, and recounts an incident that occurred at Hope's Peak; Fuyuhiko's little sister Natsumi bullied Mahiru. One of Mahiru's friends killed Natsumi for it. Fuyuhiko killed the actual culprit, but the game reveals that Mahiru had taken pictures of the culprit but refused to turn her in, which turns Fuyuhiko against her.]]
293* ''WesternAnimation/TuxAndFanny'': In one scene, Fanny is playing a ''VideoGame/TheSims''-esque home simulator called ''Home Simulation'', where the playable character has a computer and can play a video game called ''Residence Replication'', which in turn has a computer that has a game called ''Cabin Copy''.
294[[/folder]]

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