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Secret Agent (video game) Secret Agent Barbie; Secret Agent Clank; Sensory Overload (video game) Sid Meier's Covert Action; Sly Spy; Sniper Elite (video game) Sniper Elite III; Sniper Elite V2; The Solitaire Conspiracy; Spider and Web; Spy Fiction; Spy Fox; Spy Games: Elevator Mission; Spy Muppets: License to Croak; Spy Snatcher; The Spy's ...
Suehiro received a degree in film and video advertising at Osaka University of Arts. [3] After graduation he decided to join the game industry and worked at various game companies including SNK. In January 2002 he was one of the founding members of Access Games. [3] The first game he directed was the PlayStation 2 game Spy Fiction released in ...
GameSpot's editors named it the "Best Interactive Movie" and "Best Game That No One Played" of 1996, and called it "an experience that is both intelligent and thrilling." [ 27 ] Spycraft was a finalist for the Computer Game Developers Conference 's 1996 "Best Script, Story or Interactive Writing" Spotlight Award , [ 28 ] but lost the prize to ...
Spy video games (11 C, 148 P) W. Spy fiction writers (3 C, 13 P) Pages in category "Spy fiction" The following 4 pages are in this category, out of 4 total.
The Operative: No One Lives Forever is a story-driven video game, set in the 1960s, and stars spy Cate Archer as the eponymous Operative, who works for UNITY—a secret international organization "dedicated to protecting humanity from megalomaniacs bent upon world domination."
He believes good preparation for the mission gives satisfaction. The IGN reviewer agrees that the game creates "a paranoid, desperate experience which feels pitch-perfect for a spy game." [14] GameSpot reviewer also praises the feeling of paranoia in the game: "Tension and suspicion are ingrained throughout Phantom Doctrine to great effect. Its ...
Bishop and Shiela from the PS2 video game Spy Fiction; Booger Hasenpfeffer from Webkinz; Cate Archer from No One Lives Forever; Cole Phelps from L. A. Noire; David Wolf from Secret Agent; Desmond from Fallout 3; Director from Club Penguin (EPF) Dot (D.) from Club Penguin (EPF) G. from Club Penguin (EPF) Gabriel Logan from Syphon Filter; Goober ...
Various fiction invent British spy agencies with "MI numbers" other than the well-known MI5 or MI6. Examples include MI7 in Johnny English, M.I.9 in M.I. High, and MI-13 in Marvel Comics. These agencies generally have no relation to the real but defunct branches of the Directorate of Military Intelligence that previously used these designations.