These versions were released only in Japan as part of a double bill with Time Gal, another animated laserdisc arcade game conversion made by Taito, as Interactive Movie Action - Time Gal and Ninja Hayate. Revenge of the Ninja was also later converted by Ecseco to the Sega Saturn and PlayStation. Renovation sent "Master of the Ninja Arts" diplomas to players who mailed them photographic proof that they had beaten the game on hard mode. The Sega CD version was published by Renovation Products, Telenet Japan's North American subsidiary. Sometimes it also flashes multiple possible button presses on screen, indicating different paths that the player can take. Another difference is that the game flashes the buttons that need to be pressed directly on the screen. Unlike Don Bluth's laserdisc games, Ninja Hayate is animated with anime drawings by Toei Animation. If a player makes a mistake, one life decreases, and when players run out of lives, the game ends. Like earlier laserdisc games such as Don Bluth's Dragon's Lair, Ninja Hayate contains traps and creatures that requires players to dodge or attack them at specific moments, by watching for the warning buzzer (like Dragon's Lair) in addition to flashing objects (e.g. The game draws players to guide Hayate with a joystick for moving him around and one button for using weapons through 15 different stages that take place in feudal Japan-based areas. Hayate must survive a collection of deathtraps and defeat a variety of mythological creatures and other adversaries on his quest to save the princess and destroy the castle. The game tells the story of a skilled and daring teenage ninja named Hayate, infiltrating an evil castle in an attempt to rescue a princess he loves.