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Game trainers are programs made to modify memory of a computer game thereby modifying its behavior using addresses and values, in order to allow cheating. It can "freeze" a memory address disallowing the game from lowering or changing the information stored at that memory address (e.g. health meter, ammo counter, etc.) or manipulate the data at the memory addresses specified to suit the needs ...
Snake Byte is video game written by Chuck Sommerville for the Apple II and published by Sirius Software in 1982. [1] The game is a single-player variant of the snake concept. It was released the same year for Atari 8-bit computers [2] and on cartridge for the VIC-20.
Cheating in video games involves a video game player using various methods to create an advantage beyond normal gameplay, usually in order to make the game easier.Cheats may be activated from within the game itself (a cheat code implemented by the original game developers), or created by third-party software (a game trainer or debugger) or hardware (a cheat cartridge).
Snake (Finnish: Matopeli) [1] is a 1998 mobile video game created by Taneli Armanto as one of the three games included in the Nokia 6110 cellular phone.In the game, the player controls a snake in a playing field, collecting orbs which give the player points and make the snake grow in size while avoiding the walls and the snake's own longer body.
This category is for snake game variants, both single and multi-player. Pages in category "Snake video games" The following 30 pages are in this category, out of 30 total.
Snake.io is a multiplayer [1] mobile and web-based game originally developed by Amelos Interactive and currently published by Kooapps. It was inspired by the classic Snake game. It was released in 2016 by Kooapps for mobile platforms. The player controls a snake that grows longer and bigger by eating pellets on the arena.
The single-player Snake Byte was published in 1982 for Atari 8-bit computers, Apple II, and VIC-20; a snake eats apples to complete a level, growing longer in the process. In Snake for the BBC Micro (1982), by Dave Bresnen, the snake is controlled using the left and right arrow keys relative to the direction it is heading in. The snake ...
Apples, After completing the first level, all successive levels will have apples on the screen, colored just like the Apple logo. Many points are earned by contact with an apple. As it is eaten, there is a little "bleep" and the apple disappears. The other cycles are not interested in the apples, and will not eat them.