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Underground Development, Ltd. (formerly Z-Axis, Ltd.) was an American video game developer based in Foster City, California. The company was founded in 1994 by David Luntz and sold to Activision in May 2002.
This category lists video games developed by Underground Development, formerly known as Z-Axis. Pages in category "Underground Development games" The following 10 pages are in this category, out of 10 total.
BMX XXX is a 2002 sports video game developed by Z-Axis and published by Acclaim Entertainment under their AKA Acclaim label for the Xbox, PlayStation 2 and GameCube.While primarily a BMX-based action sports title, the game places a distinct emphasis on off-color and sexual humor, and allows the player to create female characters that are fully topless.
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This is a sortable list of games for the ZX Spectrum home computer. There are currently 1978 games in this incomplete list.. According to the 90th issue of GamesMaster, the ten best games released were (in descending order) Head Over Heels, Jet Set Willy, Skool Daze, Renegade, R-Type, Knight Lore, Dizzy, The Hobbit, The Way of the Exploding Fist, and Match Day II.
Nova Games: 2 Zarzon: Satan of Saturn: 1981 SNK: Fixed shooter: 2 Zaviga — 1984 Data East: Scrolling shooter: 2 Zaxxon — 1982 Sega: Isometric shooter: 2 Zektor — 1982 Sega: Multidirectional shooter: 2 Zen Nippon Pro-Wrestling Featuring Virtua — 1997 Sega: Sega ST-V: Zenkoku Seifuku Bishoujo Grand Prix: Find Love — 1997 Sega: Sega ST-V ...
Z: Steel Soldiers had a weak impact, compared to the more popular Warcraft II and Command & Conquer. [30] A few reviewers noted tiny annoyances and that the game was predictable while others described the games imperfections as significant. The game has been criticised over its lack of diversity, clumsy interface and generic sounds. [8]
Loriciel (also sometimes Loriciels) was a French video game developing company that was active from 1983 to the early 1990s. The name is a combination of logiciel, the French word for software, and Oric which was the first computer they wrote software for.