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Dr. Seuss' Fix-Up the Mix-Up Puzzler is a sliding puzzle video game developed by Coleco. It was first released for the ColecoVision in 1984 and was later ported to several home computers. The game features six Dr. Seuss characters: the Cat in the Hat, the Grinch, a Star-Bellied Sneetch, the Doorman, and the Woset and Clark. Designed for ...
Mr. Driller [a] is a 1999 puzzle video game developed and published by Namco, originally released as an arcade game on System 12 hardware before being ported to various home and portable systems. Controlling Susumu Hori, the titular "Mr. Driller", the player must dig their way to the bottom of the screen by destroying colored blocks that litter ...
Pages in category "Zed Two games" The following 5 pages are in this category, out of 5 total. This list may not reflect recent changes. A. Aqua Aqua; F.
The game continues until the queue of shapes waiting to be placed fills up. Jewel Chase - Steal as much loot as possible before the other, computer-controlled robber does and get to the exit first or the player loses. The playing area is a colour maze. At any time a robber occupies a square made up of up to 4 different colours.
Mr. Driller G is a puzzle game similar to Puyo Puyo (1990) and the classic arcade game Dig Dug (1982). [1] The story revolves around Susumu Hori, the titular Mr. Driller, and his friends trying to stop the villainous Dr. Manhole and his Ankoku Drillers from destroying the world with giant drills. [ 2 ]
Wetrix is a 3D puzzle video game developed by Zed Two, the studio of brothers Ste and John Pickford, for the Nintendo 64 and personal computers in 1998, and the Dreamcast and Game Boy Color in 1999 (as Wetrix+ and Wetrix GB respectively).
The game begins with the player assuming the part of Zed, a young man who has been enslaved in the glass mines his entire life. His uncle, Brock Dor-Cede, died, leaving Zed his ship, the SunDog. Zed has the chance to earn his freedom if he can fulfil his uncle's outstanding contract to start a colony for a religious order. With little to go on ...
The Mister Zed Show was the first program of its kind to be shot entirely on digital video. [3] The series featured a revised version of his Mister Zed character as a comedic figure, portrayed as the first-ever robotic stand-up comedian; in this context, he made numerous appearances on US and Canadian television programs and comedy festivals.