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This is a list of games made on the CD-i format, [1] [2] [3] organised alphabetically by name. It includes cancelled games as well as actual releases. There are currently 207 games on this list; the vast majority were published by Philips Interactive Media.
This category includes articles of Philips CD-i games. Subcategories. This category has the following 5 subcategories, out of 5 total. C. Cancelled CD-i games (9 P)
The Philips CDI 910 is the American version of the CDI 205, the most basic model in the series and the first Philips CD-i model, released in December 1991. Originally priced about $799 , within a year's time the price dropped to $599 .
In the 1990s, Philips Interactive Media published three action-adventure games based on Nintendo's Legend of Zelda franchise for its Compact Disc-Interactive (CD-i) players. . The first two, Link: The Faces of Evil and Zelda: The Wand of Gamelon, were developed by Animation Magic and released simultaneously on October 10, 1993, [1] and Zelda's Adventure was developed by Viridis and released on ...
Hotel Mario is a 1994 puzzle video game developed by Fantasy Factory and published by Philips Interactive Media for the Philips CD-i.The player controls Mario, who must find Princess Toadstool by going through seven hotels in the Mushroom Kingdom; each hotel is divided into stages, and the objective is to close all of the doors on each stage.
Arcade Classics is a video game compilation released on CD-i containing ports of three Namco arcade games. The compilation was released in Europe but not in North America. It contains the games Galaxian (1979), Ms. Pac-Man (1981), and Galaga (1981). Galaxian resembles the Famicom port instead of it representing the original arcade game.
The Philips CD-i's main selling point was that it was more than a game machine and could be used for multimedia needs. Due to an agreement between Nintendo and Philips about an abortive CD add-on for the SNES (which eventually evolved into Sony's PlayStation), Philips also had rights to use
[5] [11] CD Interactief thought the game proved that the transition from board game to screen could be made successfully, [12] and deemed it a "successful conversion". [13] The Video Game Critic wrote that like many CD-i titles, the game had great production values but poor gameplay. [14] CDi Reviews wrote it had a lot of replay value. [15]
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