Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
[2] [62] Critics noted the lack of depth given that it was a port of an arcade game, some difficulties with the destination arrow, and the poor "Wolfman Jack" impersonation of the in-game announcer. [2] [62] Crazy Taxi 2 was well received by reviewers with the new features helping to expand play from the original game, though some thought that ...
GameCube version released only in North America. Antz Racing: RFX Interactive: Game Boy Color: Club Acclaim: Co-published with Light and Shadow Production in North America. Crazy Taxi: Acclaim Studios Cheltenham: PlayStation 2, GameCube: Acclaim: Ported for Sega. Published by Sega in Japan Dave Mirra Freestyle BMX: Maximum Remix: Z-Axis ...
Crazy Taxi: Fare Wars, a compilation of Crazy Taxi and Crazy Taxi 2, was released in 2007 for the PlayStation Portable. A mobile-exclusive entry to the series, titled Crazy Taxi: City Rush, was released on the iOS and Google Play app stores in 2014. Crazy Taxi and its sequels have also prompted several games which clone its core gameplay.
Crazy Arcade (Korean: 크레이지 아케이드) is a free South Korean online multiplayer game developed by Nexon. It was first published in 2001. It was first published in 2001. It has offered up to five different game modes throughout its history: Bomb and Bubbles (BnB), Tetris, Hidden Catch, Dizzy Pang, and Bz, but the latter four were ...
Crazy Climber (クレイジークライマー, Kureijī Kuraimā) is a vertically scrolling video game produced by Nichibutsu (Nihon Bussan) and released for arcades in 1980. In North America, the game was also released by Taito America. Ports for the Arcadia 2001 and Atari 2600 were published in 1982, followed by the Famicom in 1986 and X68000 ...
Crazy Taxi: Fare Wars [a] is a 2007 racing video game developed by Sniper Studios and Black Hole Entertainment, and part of the Crazy Taxi series. A compilation of Crazy Taxi (1999) and Crazy Taxi 2 (2001), Black Hole Entertainment ported the original games from the Dreamcast to the PlayStation Portable, while Sniper Studios added a new multiplayer mode.
Spyro 2: Ripto's Rage!* Video game Starwing: Star Fox: The title was changed so not to confuse this game with an older, unrelated game of the same name that was released on the Atari 2600. The defunct video game company Mythicon, developers of Star Fox on the Atari, had trademarked the name Star Fox in Europe, although the game was never ...
The game was conceptualised at Data Becker in 1998 and developed in less than 23 months. [5] In Germany, the game was released in late December 2000; [5] a release in North America followed on 15 January 2001. [1] The game was released for Microsoft Windows, specifically supporting the Windows 95, 98, 2000 and Me versions. [6]