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Frog Bog; Frog Detective 2: The Case of the Invisible Wizard; Frog Detective 3: Corruption at Cowboy County; Frog Feast; Frog Fractions; Frog Fractions 2; Frogger (series) Frogger Decades; Frogrun! Frogs (video game) Frogun
Frog Fractions 2 is a sequel to the free browser-based game Frog Fractions, which was developed by independent game studio Twinbeard, founded by Jim Stormdancer.. Stormdancer used an extended alternate reality game (ARG) as part of the game's announcement and subsequent development, tying the release of the game to the success of the players' completing the AR
Video Stock Market: 1985: Computer Adversary Publishing The first game from the company; [23] an investment strategy game; "a quick (averages 1 and 1/2 hr.) and easy game, useful as a light and friendly evening among other "beer and pretzel" games." [24] Vindicator: 1983: Jimmy Huey H.A.L. Labs Voodoo Castle: 1980: Scott Adams & Alexis Adams ...
Years after the events of Frog Fractions, Hop has been impeached and works at a theater production of his original adventure, where he is constantly heckled by an internet troll in the audience named Content-Aware Phil. Disillusioned with his job and fearing he is becoming estranged from his daughter October, the player plays a point-and-click adventure game to help the two sneak out of the ...
Frogs is a single-player action arcade game released by Gremlin in 1978.It notably featured a jumping character (predating Donkey Kong by 3 years). [4] The game's graphics are "projected" by laying the monitor flat on its back and reflecting the computer-generated graphics of the frogs and flies toward the player via a mirror at a 45-degree angle.
The Case of the Invisible Wizard is the sequel to The Haunted Island. [2] The gameplay of The Case of the Invisible Wizard is mostly the same as in The Haunted Island.Players tend to spend most of their time conversing with other characters, but this game adds a new feature: the notebook, which allows players to keep track of their progress. [2]
Ribbit King is a 2003 sports video game developed by Infinity and Jamsworks and published by Bandai for the GameCube [1] and PlayStation 2. [2] The game is based on the fictional sport of Frolf (ケロフ), which is a golf-like game that is played with frogs. The frogs sit on catapults, which the player whacks with a hammer to send the frog ...
In the United States, Temple of the Frog sold 1.7 million copies and earned $28 million by August 2006. During the period between January 2000 and August 2006, it was the 5th highest-selling game launched for the Game Boy Advance, Nintendo DS or PlayStation Portable in that country.