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Tiger Electronics Ltd. (also known as Tiger and Tiger Toys) is an American toy manufacturer best known for its handheld electronic games, the Furby, the Talkboy, Giga Pets, the 2-XL robot, [1] and audio games such as Brain Warp and the Brain Shift. When it was an independent company, Tiger Electronics Inc., its headquarters were in Vernon Hills ...
The back of the original Game.com console. By February 1997, Tiger was planning to release a new game console as a direct competitor to Nintendo's Game Boy. [9] Prior to its release, Tiger Electronics stated that the Game.com would "change the gaming world as we know it," while a spokesperson stated that it would be "one of this summer's hits."
The category lists Tiger Electronics handheld LCD games. Pages in category "Tiger Electronics handheld games" The following 50 pages are in this category, out of 50 total.
Brain Warp is an electronic audio game which prototypes were invented by Big Monster Toys, and its final game production was manufactured and published by Tiger Electronics and released on June 16, 1996. [1] In this game, players follow the spoken instructions from sound files spoken from the game unit.
The R-Zone is a portable game console (originally head-worn, later handheld) developed and manufactured by Tiger Electronics.The R-Zone was shown at the American International Toy Fair in February 1995, [1] and was released later that year. [2]
Merlin, a similar electronic game, was released by Parker Brothers in the 1970s with similar rules on a 3 by 3 grid. Another similar game was produced by Vulcan Electronics in 1983 under the name XL-25. Tiger Toys also produced a cartridge version of Lights Out for its Game com handheld game console in 1997, shipped free with the console.
Giga Pets are digital pet toys that were first released by Tiger Electronics in the United States in 1997 in the midst of a virtual-pet toy fad. [1] Available in a variety of different characters, each Giga Pet is a palm-sized unit with an LCD screen and attached key ring. [2]
Battletoads: An LCD game was released by Tiger Electronics in 1991. Battletoads: A spin-off of the original also released in 1991. Despite having the same box art and title as the original NES release, it is an entirely different game from the NES version.