
Hummer Team (悍馬小組) was a pirate game developer that originated in 1992 after a few members left C&E. They were known for making what many consider decent NES ports of games that were on more advanced consoles along with having games published by many different companies including SuperTone, Yoko Soft, J.Y. Company, and Ka Sheng.
Hummer Team operated as a game developer in Taiwan from 1992 to 1999. They released 16 titles during their active years, with no games listed under their name as a publisher. The group formed in 1992 after members departed C&E. Their catalog consists almost entirely of ports for the Family Computer and Nintendo Entertainment System. The data shows they released 12 games on the Family Computer platform and 5 on the NES. While some titles appeared on later systems, the vast majority of their work targets these older consoles. Their output focuses heavily on the fighting genre with nine titles in this category. They also developed five platform games and three adventure games. One hack and slash or beat 'em up title rounds out their top genres. Every single game they created appeared in the 1990s, with no releases before or after that decade. Their most recent known release was War in December 1999. Other notable late entries include Final Fight 3 in December 1998 and The King of Fighters '96 in August 1998. Earlier in their run, they released Donkey Kong Country 4 in December 1997 and The Jungle Book 2 in December 1997. Rating data for Hummer Team comes from only two titles on PlayPile, yet the scores indicate strong performance. Super Mario World from 1995 holds an 86.1 out of 100 rating, placing it in the great category. Aladdin from the same year scored 79.7, landing it in the good bracket. No titles fall into the mixed or poor ranges based on available data. This suggests their ports generally met player expectations despite being made by a group often described as a pirate developer. Their work was published by various companies including SuperTone, Yoko Soft, J.Y. Company, and Ka Sheng. They built a reputation for creating decent NES ports of games that originally ran on more advanced hardware.















