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The Hulk's first appearance in a video game was the 1984 graphic adventure computer game Questprobe featuring The Hulk, [2] [3] and the character began making appearances on home and handheld consoles a decade later.
The game lets players assume the roles of Marvel superheroes such as Spider-Man, Daredevil, Hulk, Captain America, the Fantastic Four, and the X-Men. The game was designed to be easily understood, and this approach proved popular. TSR published an expanded edition, Marvel Superheroes Advanced Game in 1986.
The Hulk was selected as the star of the first installment because of his widespread recognition among general audiences, [1] and the game would be the Hulk's first appearance within the medium. [3] Questprobe featuring The Hulk was released on May 1, 1984, for the Acorn Electron , Apple II , Atari 8-bit computers , BBC Micro , Commodore 64 ...
Pages in category "Video games based on Hulk (comics)" The following 9 pages are in this category, out of 9 total. This list may not reflect recent changes. ...
Superman: Countdown to Apokolips: Game Boy Advance Mistic Atari Aquaman: Battle for Atlantis: Xbox, GameCube Lucky Chicken: TDK: Batman: Rise of Sin Tzu: PlayStation 2, Xbox, GameCube, Game Boy Advance Ubisoft Montreal Ubisoft Justice League: Chronicles: Game Boy Advance Full Fat: Midway Games Catwoman: 2004
The Nintendo DS version of Shattered Dimensions is a side-scrolling brawler with little gameplay difference between the multiple iterations of Spider-Man. This version also omits Ultimate Spider-Man, and features fewer villains: Electro and the Tinkerer for the Amazing Spider-Man; Boomerang and Calypso for Spider-Man Noir; and Vulture and Silvermane for Spider-Man 2099.
In 2019, the game was announced as one of the titles to be included in the Marvel Arcade1Up arcade cabinet. [9] In June 2024, Capcom announced that Marvel Super Heroes would be among the games included in the Marvel vs. Capcom Fighting Collection: Arcade Classics compilation, which was released the following September.
While it wasn't the first game on the market that let you play superheroes and duke it out with supervillains, using earth-shattering powers, it was the most innovative. The major roleplaying games of the time involved characters stalking monsters in dungeons; the heroes in Champions delivered knockout blows to archnemeses—all while speaking ...