Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Atmosfear (previously known as Nightmare in certain regions) is an Australian [1] [2] horror video board game series released in 1991 by Phillip Tanner and Brett Clements. Two years after the game's launch in 1991, the two millionth Nightmare board game was sold.
Atmosfear may refer to: Atmosfear (series), an Australian horror video board game series launched in 1991; Atmosfear (band), a British jazz funk band formed in 1979. AtmosFear (Liseberg), an amusement park ride which opened in Gothenburg, Sweden, in 2011; AtmosFEAR (Morey's Piers), an amusement park ride which opened in New Jersey, US, in 2005
Nightmare is a popular interactive horror video board game that combines elements of traditional board games with multimedia components. It was released in 1991 by A Couple 'A Cowboys and J. W. Spear & Sons as part of the Atmosfear series.
AtmosFear is a 116-metre-tall (381 ft) drop tower located in Liseberg amusement park in Gothenburg, Sweden, and is the second tallest drop tower in Europe, after Highlander at Hansa Park. AtmosFear is designed by Intamin and drops riders from a height of 100 metres (330 ft).
Atmosfear: Khufu the Mummy is a video board game released in 2006 by A Couple 'A Cowboys and Flying Bark Productions as the last DVD game of the Atmosfear series. The company previously teased a Khufu-themed expansion of Nightmare at the end of Nightmare IV , though declining sales prevented it from occurring.
Atmosfear: The Harbingers is an Australian [2] [3] video board game designed by Brett Clements and Phillip Tanner and published by Mattel as a major update to the Atmosfear series. The object of the game is to collect six different coloured "Keystones", face player's worst fear and thus beat the "Gatekeeper".
Atmosfear: The Gatekeeper is a video board game released in 2004 by A Couple 'A Cowboys and Flying Bark Productions as the first DVD version of the Atmosfear series. It is recommended to create a perfect " Atmosfear " before playing the game, which includes dimming down the lights and turning up the volume for the video.
This page was last edited on 24 October 2024, at 01:26 (UTC).; Text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License; additional terms may apply.