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Crash Bandicoot is a video game series created by Andy Gavin and Jason Rubin. [1] It is published by Activision, Sierra Entertainment, Vivendi Universal Games, Konami, Universal Interactive Studios, King, and Sony Computer Entertainment, with entries developed by Polarbit, Toys for Bob, Beenox, Radical Entertainment, Vicarious Visions, Traveller's Tales, Eurocom, King and Naughty Dog.
[citation needed] For most mech games, they are played in either first-person or third-person view style. Other games are based on popular Anime television shows such as the various Gundam series, Robotech, and Evangelion. Also, games with a mech theme are featured in RPG games such as Xenosaga and the Front Mission series.
Destruction Derby 2 is a 1996 vehicular combat racing video game developed by Reflections Interactive and published by Psygnosis for PlayStation and Microsoft Windows. The sequel to Destruction Derby (1995) and developed by the same team, players race with the goal of earning points by damaging opponent cars.
Destruction Derby is a 1995 vehicular combat racing video game developed by Reflections Interactive and published by Psygnosis for MS-DOS, PlayStation and Sega Saturn.Based on the sport of demolition derby, the game tasks the player with racing and destroying cars to score points.
Mayhem (also known as Mayhem 3D) is a racing video game developed by Left Field Productions, published by Rombax Games, and distributed by Zoo Entertainment for Xbox 360 and PlayStation 3. [1] The game is a demolition derby style game that features 3D gameplay that works on any TV.
Crash Bandicoot (video game) Crash Bandicoot 2: Cortex Strikes Back; Crash Bandicoot 2: N-Tranced; Crash Bandicoot 4: It's About Time; Crash Bandicoot N. Sane Trilogy; Crash Bandicoot Purple and Spyro Orange; Crash Bandicoot: Mutant Island; Crash Bandicoot: On the Run! Crash Bandicoot: The Huge Adventure; Crash Bandicoot: The Wrath of Cortex ...
Destruction Derby Raw is a 2000 racing video game developed by Studio 33 and published by Sony Computer Entertainment for the PlayStation. [1] it is the third main installment in Psygnosis's Destruction Derby series following Destruction Derby 2 (1996), and fourth overall after the Nintendo 64 exclusive Destruction Derby 64 (1999).
Destruction Derby Arenas received "mixed" reviews according to the review aggregation website Metacritic. [3] IGN felt the game was worth an hour or two due to car crashes, but after that would quickly lose value. [9] GameSpot felt the online mode was worth renting the game for genre fans, but that the game otherwise did not justify its cost. [2]