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The Dinosaur Game [1] (also known as the Chrome Dino) [2] is a browser game developed by Google and built into the Google Chrome web browser. The player guides a pixelated t-rex across a side-scrolling landscape, avoiding obstacles to achieve a higher score. The game was created by members of the Chrome UX team in 2014.
Cadillacs and Dinosaurs (video game) Cadillacs and Dinosaurs: The Second Cataclysm; Carnivores (video game series) Carnivores (video game) Carnivores 2; Carnivores: Cityscape; Carnivores: Dinosaur Hunter; Carnivores: Dinosaur Hunter HD; Cell to Singularity; Chrono Trigger; Color a Dinosaur; Combat of Giants; Combat of Giants: Dinosaurs 3D ...
The player's dinosaur in the center, surrounded by 5 Trogs. Trog is a maze game reminiscent of Pac-Man where players assume the role of Theropod-like dinosaurs (with Styracosaurus-like heads) Rex, Bloop, Spike, and/or Gwen, through 49 islands set in the land of "Og", home to the one-eyed cavemen known as the "Trog".
Baby T-Rex is a platform game developed by Beam Software for Game Boy. It was released in 1993 in Europe by Laser Beam Entertainment , Beam's publishing arm. It was also released (with altered graphics and story) as Agro Soar in Australia, as Bamse in Sweden, and as We're Back!
Dino Island is a 2002 PC business simulation video game developed and published by Monte Cristo. In the game, the player builds and manages a dinosaur theme park, and can also crossbreed various dinosaurs to create new ones. Dino Island received "generally unfavorable" reviews according to Metacritic.
Radical Rex is an action platforming video game released in 1994 in North America, Europe and Australia. It is a remake of the 1993 Game Boy game Baby T-Rex.It was published by Activision and developed by Australian game studio Beam Software for the Super NES, Genesis, and Sega CD.
Reviewing the PC version, GameZone was critical of the game's repetitive player requests and short mission mode. GameZone praised the graphics, but felt the game was too similar to other simulation games. [38] GameZone praised the PlayStation 2 version for its dinosaur animations, but noted its "awkward" camera views. [36]
The game contains 400MB of dinosaur-related information, including full-motion video, audio, and a gallery of scanned artwork. The main program features 1000 illustrations, 200 hypertext articles, and 800 pop-up windows. Players can explore the content in four different ways: Atlas, Timeline, Families, and Index.