Ecrofirt said:
Was the system ever released in the US?
In Japan is was called the "PC Engine". In the US it was the "TurboGrafx-16". (Also known as the "Turbo CD" or "Turbo Duo" for the CD add-ons.)
In Japan, the PC Engine came out earlier and beat the Genesis/Mega Drive as "the alternative to the NES/Famicom". The CD add-on was actually popular, and widely embraced, unlike the Sega CD in America which was the beginning of the end for Sega.
In America, the TG-16 got mocked when word got out that it wasn't "really" a 16-bit system, and that it was only 8-bit with a 16-bit graphics card. And then it got killed by the Genesis' cool factor and popularity.
The PCE didn't really have any first-party game of Mario/Sonic caliber (Bonk was it's Crash Bandicoot), but it had powerful third party support. If most/all of those games were brought over to America, the TG-16 might've stood a a chance against the Genesis. As-is, it had very little going for it. Weaker graphics. No first party. Limited third party.
"Dracula X: Rondo of the Blood" still stands as a reason to buy the system. Even though it's Japanese so you'd have to import it. However the price on both the game and the CD hardware is quite prohibitive (unless you like bootlegs and emulators).
Everything else is just pretty good versions of the kinds of third party games that were popular back in the day.
I liked "Ys 1&2" for the action-RPG front, and the "Valis" series (four games, only two came out on the American TG-CD) is an anime-style platformer that's not quite up to the Megaman/Castlevania standard, but stars a sword-weilding scantily-clad schoolgirl for the heroine.