Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
The Junior Field Trips series is a trilogy of point-and-click children's computer and video games released by Humongous Entertainment in conjunction with Random House.These games (in general) offered virtual tours of particular locations related to their theme, and included a game suite with virtual coloring pages, a scavenger hunt, and various other games depending upon the title.
Jungle Party is designed in a way that kids would be able to play it. [4] Up to 4 people can play all the 40 mini-games, [5] with Liz Barker as a narrator. [6] Some of them include skydiving, colour matching, stealing an ostrich's egg and shooting balloons. [4]
Timon and Pumbaa's Jungle Games consists of five mini-games featuring Timon and Pumbaa, as well as other jungle animals from The Lion King.The games are Jungle Pinball (a pinball game where the board is filled with animals instead of bumpers), Burper (a shooter type game, using Pumbaa to belch gas), Hippo Hop (concept similar to Frogger), Bug Drop (based on Puyo Puyo), and Slingshooter (a ...
Jungle Run is a British children's television game show that aired on CITV as part of the ITV network from 10 September 1999 to 29 November 2006. It is similar to shows such as Fort Boyard and The Crystal Maze .
Let's Go Jungle!: Lost on the Island of Spice is a joystick-mounted gun arcade game by Sega. Players take the roles of Ben and Norah stranded on a jungle island which has been overrun by monsters. Each player must shoot the monsters with their machine gun while looking for rescue. There is a version of the game called Let's Go Jungle!
The series has been adapted from a 52-minute animated film titled The Jungle Bunch: The Movie [3] (originally Les As de la Jungle: Opération Banquise; The Jungle Bunch: Back to the Ice Floe). The film aired on France 3, on December 31, 2011 and was released on April 10, 2013. This film was included as premium at the Kidscreen Awards.
Also known as Hugo: PC Calendar, [17] the game was released in Denmark as Hugo Redder Julen, in Germany as Hugo rettet das Weihnachtsfest, in Argentine as Hugo salva la Navidad, and in Russia as Кузя спасает Рождество. It was re-released as part of Trollbox 1 (packaged together with Hugo 5 and Stinky & Biber) in 2000.
It was the second title in Disney's Gamebreak series following Timon and Pumbaa's Jungle Games (1995). [3] A Game Boy port, developed by Tiertex and published by THQ, was released in North America in March 1997. The video game was based on the film The Hunchback of Notre Dame and features a collection of mini-games based on the Festival of Fools.