Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
PocketBike Racer is an advergaming title developed by Blitz Games for the Xbox and Xbox 360 video game consoles. [1] On November 19, 2006, Burger King started selling it for an additional $3.99 USD ($4.99 in Canada) with any value meal.
The Burger King games, sometimes known collectively as King Games, [1] are a series of three advertisement-based video games sold at Burger King.The games were sold as part of a promotion during the holiday season from late November until December 24, 2006.
Big Bumpin ' was one of three promotional Burger King-themed releases for winter 2006, the other two games were Sneak King and PocketBike Racer. The Burger King-only marketing run was from November 19 through December 24, 2006. [6] The games were available for $3.99 with any purchase of any Burger King value meal. [7]
In Pocketbike Racer, the mascots face off in a minibike race. Big Bumpin' pits them against each other in a game of bumper cars and finally in Sneak King, players control the King in a third-person perspective stealth game where the King must sneak up behind hungry people and offer them Burger King products. Players are graded on how ...
X-Play rated the game as one out of five, but noted that "[t]his is the game that really got the buzz going about BK's whole foray into gaming, thanks mostly to screenshots of the Burger King hiding in a garbage can, lying in wait for what appeared to be a college-age woman walking toward him. Stalking in the name of great taste."
These reviews were removed by Metacritic in early September, restoring the games' user scores to their original "generally favorable" and "universal acclaim" scores of 8.7 and 9.0 respectively. [25] Gears 5 was review bombed on Steam primarily by players from China after the game was pulled from sale in that region by its developer, The ...
The reviews couldn’t be more glowing — from senior dogs to horses and hogs, customers love this product. See what they’re crowing about at Quick Feed . Find it for $330.
A review bomb is an Internet phenomenon in which a large number of people or a few people with multiple accounts [1] post negative user reviews online in an attempt to harm the sales or popularity of a product, a service, or a business. [2]