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Rally Cross 2 is a racing video game developed by Idol Minds and published by Sony Computer Entertainment for the PlayStation. 989 Studios released the game in North America. It is the sequel to Rally Cross (1997).
Rally Cross 2: PlayStation: November 1998: Idol Minds: Crash Bandicoot: Warped: PlayStation: November 3, 1998: Naughty Dog: Twisted Metal III: PlayStation: November 10, 1998: 989 Studios: Published by 989 Studios in North America only CyberStrike 2: Microsoft Windows: November 17, 1998: Simutronics: Published by 989 Studios in North America ...
Rally Cross is a 1997 racing video game developed by Sony Interactive Studios America and published by Sony Computer Entertainment for the PlayStation. It is centered around rallying and off-road racing. It received positive reviews for its graphics, content, playability and four-player multiplayer. It was followed up by a sequel named Rally ...
Original release date: December 5, 2009 Release years by system: 2009 – iOS [8] Notes: An arcade video game that puts the player in control of F-35 plane during the international crisis [9] The player chooses which enemy to target on a 2D field with a base at the center that can take only a certain amount of damage [10]
By May 2020, as the Xbox Series X was nearing release, Microsoft announced they were seeking further requests from players of what games to expand their backward compatibility library with. The company stated, "Resurrecting titles from history often presents a complex mix of technical and licensing challenges, but the team is committed to doing ...
V-Rally 3 – PlayStation 2, Xbox, PC. Includes cars from the 2000 to 2002 World Rally Championship and the 2001 to 2002 Super 1600 Junior World Rally Championship. V-Rally 4 – PlayStation 4, Xbox One, PC, Nintendo Switch. Richard Burns Rally (2004) – PlayStation 2, Xbox, Gizmondo, PC. Xpand Rally – PC. Xpand Rally Xtreme – PC.
International Rally received mixed to negative reviews upon release.Computer & Video Games commended the game as a "credible attempt at squeezing a semblance of realism onto the Game Boy Color", highlighting the game's tuning and maintenance options, but found the game was not fun enough to warrant purchase. [2]
This is a list of Kemco games. Of note, the video games in North America prior to 1992 were not published by Kemco themselves, but instead by their distributor Seika Corporation of Torrance, California , who used the label Kemco * Seika to market Kemco's titles in the region.