Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Defunct (video game) Descent (video game) Descent II; Descent 3; Destiny (video game series) Destiny (video game) Destiny 2; Dexter's Laboratory: Robot Rampage; Don't Die, Mr. Robot! Drawn to Life: The Next Chapter (Nintendo DS video game) Droid Assault; Drone Tactics; Dry Drowning; Duck Attack! Dysfunctional Systems
Tentacular is a physics-based adventure game where the player takes on the role of a gigantic but good-hearted tentacled beast in the waters of La Kalma, [4] tasked with helping the islands citizens research a strange and powerful energy source.
Consentacle is a science fiction cooperative board game about negotiating consensual sex between two femme characters: a human astronaut and a tentacled alien. It was designed by Naomi Clark and illustrated by James Harvey. [1] [2] Consentacle was published in 2018 after a successful Kickstarter campaign raised $154,609. [3]
The games system controls are highly customizable with a wide range of features for the ultimate personal robot experience. The player fights robots in championships around the world, starting at Robot Wars London studio, in order to gain prize money to unlock new levels. In the later tournaments, they need to pay money in order to go into the ...
Color Robot Battle is a similar game for the TRS-80 Color Computer released in the same year. RoboWar is a similar game that was released later on the Macintosh. Crobots uses a simplified version of the 'C' programming language to program the robots. MindRover is a 2000 implementation of concepts taken from RobotWar and Robot Odyssey.
The payload's movement is based on the amount of robot's escorting it. The more robot of the same team is escorting the payload, the faster the payload goes, and when the amount of robots of both teams escorting the payload is the same, the payload will not move and will stay in place. [8]
Storm 2 was eligible to be named as a wildcard but was not chosen. Like many other robots, Storm 2 also competed in Techno Games as Ickle Toaster in the Football and Sumo events. The original Storm was never seen in Robot Wars but competed in various robot combat events across the UK and the Dutch Robot Games.
Robot Wars: Advanced Destruction is the third video game based on the British game show Robot Wars. It was the third of four games based on the show, with the first three selling over 250,000 copies. [1] It was developed by Crawfish Interactive and published by BBC Multimedia and was released exclusively for the Game Boy Advance in 2001.