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Rodent's Revenge is a puzzle video game created by Christopher Lee Fraley and distributed as part of Microsoft Entertainment Pack 2 in 1991. [1] The player takes on the role of a mouse, with the objective being to trap cats by pushing blocks around, while avoiding obstacles.
The Backyard (video game) Bad Rats; Basil the Great Mouse Detective; Batman: Arkham Shadow; Biker Mice from Mars (1994 video game) Biker Mice from Mars (2006 video game) BROK the InvestiGator; Brutal: Paws of Fury
Dr. Michael Selig felt that dealing with sales was a distraction from his research and development. Game is still being developed. Glider PRO: 1991 Mac OS, Mac OS X Casady & Greene: When Casady & Greene went bankrupt, the rights to the series reverted to the author, John Calhoun, who opted to give a few versions of the game away for free on his ...
For much of the early 1990s, the Gamesampler, a subset of the Entertainment Pack small enough to fit on a single high-density disk, was shipped as a free eleventh disk added to a ten-pack of Verbatim blank 3.5" microfloppy diskettes. Games on the sampler included Jezzball, Rodent's Revenge, Tetris, and Skifree.
Rodent's Revenge: Player character who must avoid cats while trapping them with moveable blocks. Tilo Ghost of a Tale: Small anthropomorphic mouse minstrel who serves as the playable character and must travel through dungeons in a dark medieval setting. [21] Transformice Transformice: The playable characters of the multiplayer browser game.
Find out in today's Game of the Day! Zuma's Revenge is the definitive match 3 ball shooter, available for you to play right now on Games.com! Stunning graphics and gameplay await you.
37-year-old Ryan Sentelle State is facing criminal charges after police discovered he was using rodents to receive free hotel rooms. According to Utah police, State would begin his scam by ...
Chip's Challenge is a top-down tile-based puzzle video game originally published in 1989 by Epyx as a launch title for the Atari Lynx.It was later ported to several other systems and was included in the Windows 3.1 bundle Microsoft Entertainment Pack 4 (1992), and the Windows version of the Best of Microsoft Entertainment Pack (1995), where it found a much larger audience.