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Home Games Blades of Steel
Blades of Steel
ArcadeNES / FamicomSports

Blades of Steel

Developer: Konami · Published by Konami (Ultra Games in North America) · 1987
Fast, fictional, and full of fights: arcade hockey on the NES.
HockeySports2-PlayerArcade Port
Not yet reviewed
About This Game

Blades of Steel is an ice hockey video game developed and published by Konami. It debuted in arcades in 1987 and was ported to the NES in 1988, where it was released in North America under Konami's Ultra Games label. Versions also reached home computers and the Game Boy.

The game presents a fast, arcade-style take on hockey rather than a simulation. Matches are quick, checking is aggressive, and a button press triggers fistfights when play gets too rough, with the loser sent to the penalty box. Between periods, a shooting-gallery bonus round breaks up the action. Blades of Steel is also remembered as an early example of digitized speech on the NES; the cartridge announces its own title and calls plays aloud, which was a notable technical touch for the hardware at the time.

The NES release was not licensed by the NHL, so teams are identified by city rather than by official names or rosters. Despite that, its responsive controls and the novelty of the on-ice fights made it one of the more popular sports titles on the system and a frequent point of nostalgia for players of the era.

Konami has returned to the property occasionally, including a Nintendo DS follow-up, but the 1988 NES game remains the version most associated with the name. Original NES cartridges are common and inexpensive on the secondhand market, and the game runs cleanly under emulation.

Screenshots2 shots
Blades of Steel screenshotBlades of Steel screenshot
In the News1 mentions
Apr 51999
Extreme Boards & Blades Announced
Casual skaters and daredevils alike can experience the exhilaration of catching major air on the half-pipe and busting tricks from 50/50 grinds down handrails to turning 720s in Extreme Boards & Blades.
Release
In Features & Editorial1 mentions
The Men Who Handed Me the Controller
Adam had three father figures, and every one of them put a console or a keyboard in his hands. One made him a Sega guy for life. One handed him the web software that built POCG. One bought him a PlayStation just so he could keep writing.
Jun 21, 2026
How to Play TodayYour options for running this game in 2026
Original Hardware
Playable on the NES with the original cartridge, which stays cheap and easy to find. The arcade original needs arcade hardware or MAME.
Modern Re-release
Konami has reissued it occasionally in compilations, though no current standalone re-release is widely available.
Emulation / Other Options
Runs perfectly in NES and arcade emulators.