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Super Nintendo, Nintendo 64, Game Boy Advance, GameCube, DS, Wii, 3DS, Wii U, Arcade, [7] Switch, iOS/Android Kart racing, 1st person view ( Mario Kart 7 ) 2004
Dark Rift is a 1997 3D fighting video game for the Nintendo 64 and Microsoft Windows, developed by Kronos Digital Entertainment and published by Vic Tokai. It is notable for being the first N64 game (and one of few) to run at 60 frames per second. [2] Dark Rift is considered the sequel to 1995's Criticom.
Top Gear Overdrive is a racing game released in 1998 for the Nintendo 64 and the sequel to Top Gear Rally.The game has support for high-resolution graphics if used with the Expansion Pak and features music from the band Grindstone.
Vigilante 8 is a 1998 vehicular combat game developed by Luxoflux and published by Activision for PlayStation, Nintendo 64, and Game Boy Color.Although officially it has no connection to Activision's Interstate '76 series, [4] it features several of its themes including auto-vigilantes, the 1970s time frame, and specific fictional vehicle companies.
The player can choose from one of the eight fighters in a match or "Duel". After beating the other seven characters and an identical version of themselves, there are two other opponents: Gouriki, a character wearing a cat mask and rope-like fairy wings, and Ohgami Reiji, the final boss that wears a large straw hat covering his eyes, and business suit.
Fighting Force is a 1997 3D beat 'em up developed by Core Design and published by Eidos.It was released for PlayStation, Microsoft Windows, and Nintendo 64.Announced shortly after Core became a star developer through the critical and commercial success of Tomb Raider, Fighting Force was highly anticipated but met with mixed reviews.
Killer Instinct Gold is a fighting game developed by Rare and published by Nintendo for the Nintendo 64.It is based on the arcade game Killer Instinct 2. Players control characters who fight on a 2D plane set against a 3D background.
Fighters Destiny, known in Japan as Fighting Cup [2], is a 1998 video game developed by Genki alongside Opus Corp for the Nintendo 64. It closely models the 3D fighting game standard set by Sega's Virtua Fighter, but integrates a unique point scoring system. The game's generic characters and unoriginal presentation have been panned by critics ...