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Nintendo 64 controller. The Nintendo 64 controller (NUS-005) is an "m"-shaped controller with 10 buttons (A, B, C-Up, C-Down, C-Left, C-Right, L, R, Z, and Start), one analog stick in the center, a digital directional pad on the left side, and an extension port on the back for many of the system's accessories.
Space Panic (スぺース・パ二ック, Supesu Panikku) is a 1980 arcade video game developed by Universal.Predating Nintendo's Donkey Kong, and lacking a jump mechanic, Space Panic was the first game involving climbing ladders between walkable platforms.
Universal eventually moved away from clones and began producing original arcade games. Get A Way [ b ] (1978) [ 3 ] was a sit-down arcade racing game that used a 16-bit central processing unit (CPU), [ 4 ] for which it was advertised as the world's first 16-bit game; [ 5 ] [ 6 ] it was among Japan's top twenty highest-earning arcade video games ...
Mr. Do's Castle is a platform game released in arcades by Universal in September 1983. In Japan, the game is titled Mr. Do! versus Unicorns. Marketed as a sequel to the original Mr. Do! released one year earlier, the game bears a far closer resemblance to Universal's Space Panic from 1980.
Cosmic Avenger [a] is a scrolling shooter developed by Universal and released as an arcade video game in July 1981. [1] It is part of the first wave shooters with forced horizontal scrolling which followed Konami's Scramble and Super Cobra from earlier in the year.
UPL Co., Ltd (株式会社ユーピーエル), formally known as Universal Playland (ユニバーサルプレイランド), was a video game production company headquartered in Oyama, Tochigi, Japan. It was founded in 1972 as a subsidiary of Universal Entertainment. [ 1 ]
Do! Run Run, also known as Super Pierrot (スーパーピエロ Sūpā Piero), is the fourth and final incarnation of Mr.Do!, the Universal video game mascot. Returning to his Mr.
The 1991 Virtuality 1000CS arcade unit showing the headset and space joystick controller. The unit has original "W Industries" branding with Virtuality embossed and the word "cyber" prominently displayed on the side. Virtuality was a range of virtual reality machines produced by Virtuality Group, and found in video arcades in the early 1990s. [1]