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Sylvester and Tweety in Cagey Capers: Time Warner Interactive: 1994: Sega Genesis: Looney Tunes: Twouble! (NA) Sylvester & Tweety: Breakfast on the Run (EU) Infogrames: 1998: Game Boy Color: Tweety's High-Flying Adventure: Kemco: 2000 Tweety and the Magic Gems: 2001: Game Boy Advance
Sylvester & Tweety: Breakfast on the Run, known as Looney Tunes: Twouble! in North America, is a 2D and isometric, pseudo-3D platform video game developed by Bit Managers and published by Infogrames for the Game Boy Color in 1998. It features the Looney Tunes characters Sylvester and Tweety.
Tweety's High-Flying Adventure is a platform game that largely follows the narrative of the film. The player guides Tweety as they undertake a journey to ten different worldwide locations to collect 80 'pawprints' from cats across the globe, including Paris, Venice, Egypt, and San Francisco. [ 1 ]
The game needs to be set at 81% difficulty or higher to play all the levels. The player can also gain points by knocking things off the shelves or from bags of catnip, as well as striking at Tweety as he escapes. Sylvester can gain a life for 100,000 points. If Sylvester lose his last life, he has two continues to resume the game.
Tweety and Sylvester No. 9, published in 1955 Tweety & Sylvester No. 100, published in 1979 Western Publications produced a comic book about Tweety and Sylvester entitled Tweety and Sylvester , first in Dell Comics Four Color series #406, 489, and 524, then in their own title from Dell Comics (#4–37, 1954–62), and later from Gold Key Comics ...
Final appearance of Tweety; Only Sylvester cartoon directed by Gerry Chiniquy; Final Sylvester cartoon produced by Warner Bros. Cartoons; 99 Road to Andalay: December 26 MM Friz Freleng and Hawley Pratt (co-director) Blu-Ray: Looney Tunes Collector's Choice: Volume 4; with Speedy Gonzales; First Sylvester cartoon produced by DePatie–Freleng ...
Tweety and Sylvester are voiced by Mel Blanc, and Sam, the orange-red cat acting as Sylvester's rival, is performed by an uncredited Daws Butler, doing a voice reminiscent of Frank Fontaine's "John" from The Jack Benny Program and "Crazy Guggenheim" from The Jackie Gleason Show. The title is a play on the phrase "Trick or treat".
After unsuccessfully begging Tweety to stop, Sylvester frightfully waves goodbye to the audience and falls from the tree, straight into the dogs. Tweety starts laughing ("That puddy tat's got a pink skin under his fur coat!"), whereas Sylvester closes the gate, bruised, battered and having lost most of his fur from the attack.