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Looney Tunes: Cosmic Capers Animated Jigsaw Puzzle: Looney Tunes: Sunsoft: 1999 Game Boy Color: Baby Looney Tunes Carnival: Jaleco: Arcade (medal game) Looney Tunes: Cosmic Capers: SouthPeak Interactive: Microsoft Windows: Looney Tunes PhotoFun [1] MGI Software Corp Looney Tunes Racing: Infogrames: 2000: Game Boy Color. PlayStation. Looney ...
Case File #1: The Glowing Bug Man: PC: Scooby-Doo! Case File #2: The Scary Stone Dragon: PC: Scooby-Doo! Case File #3: Frights! Camera! Frights! PC: Scooby-Doo & Looney Tunes Cartoon Universe: Adventure: Nintendo 3DS, PC: Shaun the Sheep: Shaun the Sheep: Nintendo DS: Shaun the Sheep: Off His Head: Nintendo DS: Shrek: Shrek: Xbox, GameCube ...
Baby Looney Tunes is an American animated television series depicting toddler versions of several Looney Tunes characters. [1] It was produced by Warner Bros. Animation as its first preschool animated series. [ 2 ]
Since the creation of Tiny Toon Adventures, there have been a multitude of video games based on the series. During the 90's, Konami held the license to develop and publish the Tiny Toon Adventures games. Other developers that have held the license include Atari, Terraglyph, Warthog, Lost Boy Games, and Treasure.
The object of the game is to collect all the gears scattered around the levels and progress through all four different eras. The gameplay plays much the same as Bugs Bunny: Lost in Time, retaining Bugs' traits, but introducing new ones to Taz, as well as a co-op mode where one player can control Bugs, with the other controlling Taz; alternatively, the game can be played in single-player, with ...
Bugs thinks Granny is having a baby and the others are convinced by Daffy's make-believe theory on where babies come from and a guidebook on baby care. As everyone prepares by practicing on Tweety, the baby turns out to be a hamster. Absent: Floyd Minton.
Sylvester and Tweety in Cagey Capers is a 2D platform game featuring the Looney Tunes characters Sylvester and Tweety. It was released for the Genesis/Mega Drive console in 1994 and was the first video game to star Sylvester and Tweety.
Review aggregator GameRankings rated the game 60.00% based on one review. [5] Paul Bufton and Gus Swan reviewed the game for Mean Machines Sega magazine, Bufton noted the game featured an "unusual combination of fluffy cartoon characters and a challenging difficulty level" while Swan felt it lacked "any real feel or gameplay sophistication".