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The Sord M5 is a home computer launched by Sord Computer Corporation in 1982. [1] [2] [3] Primarily the Sord M5 competed in the Japanese home computer market.It was also sold as the CGL M5 in the United Kingdom by Computer Games Limited and was reasonably popular in Czechoslovakia, where the M5 stood as one of the first affordable computers available to the general public. [4]
It was a 2.1 system consisting of two satellite speakers, a subwoofer, a wired control unit and an inbuilt sound card, which connected to the computer via USB. The subwoofer was very similar to that used in the Companion 3 Series II system, however the Companion 5 used larger satellite speakers.
Starting in 1980, Nintendo began to release a series of electronic games designed by Yokoi called the Game & Watch games. [3] Taking advantage of the technology used in the credit-card-sized calculators that had appeared on the market, Yokoi designed the series of LCD-based games to include a digital time display in the corner of the screen. [ 4 ]
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Microsoft Home, Microsoft: The Magic School Bus Explores Inside the Earth: 1996: Music Pen, Microsoft: The Magic School Bus Explores the Ocean: 1995: Microsoft Home, Microsoft: The Magic School Bus Lost in the Solar System: 1994: Microsoft Home, Microsoft: Mah Jongg for Windows: 1992: Ron Balewski, SyncroSoft Marble: 1993: Peter Balch Marbles ...
The following is an incomplete list of video games for the MSX, MSX2, MSX2+, and MSX turbo R home computers. Here are listed 1050 [ a ] games released for the system. The total number of games published for this platform is over 2000.
Battle Arena Toshinden, released as Toh Shin Den [a] [b] [2] in Japan, is a 1995 fighting video game developed by Tamsoft and published by Takara for the PlayStation. [3] It was one of the first fighting games, after Virtua Fighter on arcade and console, to boast polygonal characters in a 3D environment, and features a sidestep maneuver which is credited for taking the genre into "true 3D."
DreamMix TV offers 17 playable characters originating from various video game and toy franchises created by Hudson Soft, Konami and Takara. [5] In addition to the playable characters, recurring Bomberman villain Mujoe appears in the story as one of the World Fighters hosts and as the game's final boss, aided by his Hige-Hige Bandits.