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MicroLeague Wrestling was the first WWF theme video game to be released. The game was available for Commodore 64 and Atari ST and in 1989 for Amiga and MS-DOS. WWF European Rampage Tour was released in 1992 for the Amiga, Atari ST, Commodore 64, and MS-DOS. WWF Rage in the Cage was released in 1993 for the Sega CD.
Video games featuring professional wrestling promotion All Japan Pro Wrestling: All Japan Pro Wrestling [1993] (SNES) All Japan Pro Wrestling Dash: World's Strongest Tag Team [1993] (SNES) All Japan Pro Wrestling Jet [1994] (Game Boy) Zen-Nihon Pro Wrestling: Fight da Pon! [1994] (SNES) All Japan Pro Wrestling 2: 3-4 Budokan [1995] (SNES)
For many decades, from its founding in 1948 until the mid-1980s, the NWA acted as a governing body of America's many regional wrestling promotions, and membership in the NWA allowed for the shared use of big-name stars for local wrestling events. WWE (as the CWC) was a member of the NWA between 1950s and 1963, and again (as the WWWF/WWF ...
The BASIC listing was published in the August 1985 issue of the magazine "Oh!MZ Publications". [38] [39] [40] In 1990 the game was commercially converted for the Game Boy. In 2011, the game community restored a faithful as possible version from the available variants. [41] Pixel Dungeon: 2014 roguelike: GPLv3+ Freeware/Commercial: watabou
The game was released under its original title WWF With Authority! in 2001 on February 21. Later, in the summer of 2002, as a result of a lawsuit between the World Wildlife Fund and the World Wrestling Federation (which changed its name to World Wrestling Entertainment, or WWE, as a result), the game's official title became WWE With Authority!.
Rick Teverbaugh reviewed the game for Computer Gaming World, and stated that "Bop 'N Wrestle is a game with some stunning graphics. It is also a well-timed release now that championship wrestling is now a network staple. But, unfortunately, it is a game that tries to do too much." [6]
Papa Shango faces I.R.S. in the game's titular steel cage match. Modes include One-on-One (regular match and steel cage match variations), Tag Team, WWF Championship (choose one wrestler and defeat all the others to become WWF Champion), and Tag Team Championship (choose two wrestlers and defeat combinations of the rest in a series of tag team matches to become WWF Tag Team Champions).
The game's lack of modes was also criticized. IGN recommended other Japanese Dreamcast wrestling titles such as Toukon Retsuden and Giant Gram over Royal Rumble. [4] [5] The earliest review came from PlanetDreamcast, which gave it a low score of four out of ten over a month before the game was released. [14]