Castlevania (1986 video game)

Castlevania
North American NES box art
Developer(s)Konami
Publisher(s)Konami
Nintendo (arcade, GBA)
Director(s)Hitoshi Akamatsu
Producer(s)Akihiko Nagata
Designer(s)Akihiko Nagata
Programmer(s)Nobuhiro Matsuoka
Artist(s)Noriyasu Togakushi
Composer(s)Kinuyo Yamashita
Satoe Terashima
SeriesCastlevania
Platform(s)Family Computer Disk System, Nintendo Entertainment System, Arcade, C64, Amiga, MS-DOS, Mobile phone, Game Boy Advance, Windows
Release
September 26, 1986
  • Famicom Disk System
    • JP: September 26, 1986
    NES/Famicom
    • NA: April 30, 1987
    • PAL: November 1988
    • JP: February 5, 1993
    Arcade
    C64, Amiga, MS-DOS
    • NA: 1990
    • PAL: 1990 (C64 only)
    Mobile phone
    Game Boy Advance
    • JP: August 10, 2004
    • NA: October 25, 2004
    • PAL: January 7, 2005
    • AU: November 24, 2005
Genre(s)Action, platform
Mode(s)Single-player
Arcade systemPlayChoice-10, Nintendo VS. System

Castlevania, known in Japan as Akumajō Dracula, is a 1986 action-platform game developed and published by Konami. It was originally released in Japan for the Famicom Disk System in September 1986, before being ported to cartridge format and released in North America for the Nintendo Entertainment System (NES) in 1987 and in Europe in 1988. It was also re-issued for the Family Computer in cartridge format in 1993. It is the first installment in the Castlevania series.

Players control Simon Belmont, descendant of a legendary vampire hunter, who enters the castle of Count Dracula to destroy him when he suddenly reappears 100 years after Simon's ancestor vanquished him. Castlevania was developed in tandem with the MSX2 game Vampire Killer, which was released a month later and uses the same characters and setting, but features different gameplay mechanics. It was followed by a sequel, Castlevania II: Simon's Quest, and a prequel, Castlevania III: Dracula's Curse, both of which were also released for the NES. Super Castlevania IV was released in 1991 for the Super NES and follows the same story. A remake, Akumajō Dracula, for the Sharp X68000 home computer was released in 1993, and was later re-released for the PlayStation as Castlevania Chronicles in 2001.

Castlevania was a commercial success and received widespread acclaim. It is considered an NES classic by PC World, while Nintendo Power and Game Informer both ranked it in their lists of the best video games ever made.