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The first PC game based on the film was the Casper Brainy Book which was developed by Knowledge Adventure and was released in May 1996. It was aimed at children aged 4–8 and is an interactive storybook, similar in style to Disney's Animated Storybooks, in which players read and play in the story and there are three mini-games, Fatso's Creature Feature, Stretch's Shake Rattle and Roll and ...
Brain Jam: 1992: Brain Jam Publications Brainteaser: 1992: Alan F. Shikoh BreakThru! 1994: Zoo Corporation, Spectrum HoloByte: Brer Rabbit and the Wonderful Tar Baby: 1991: Rabbit Ears Productions, American Interactive Media: Brick Breaker II: 1994: Henry Yu, YuS Design Studio Bricks: 1990: Bricks: the Ultimate Construction Toy! 1996
Pages in category "Casper video games" The following 4 pages are in this category, out of 4 total. This list may not reflect recent changes. C. Casper (video game)
Casper: Spirit Dimensions a 3D action-adventure game. It is the first 3D game to have a movable camera in the Casper series. It is the first 3D game to have a movable camera in the Casper series. Both right and left analog sticks are needed to move Casper allowing him to fly up and down as well as forwards, backwards and sideways.
Casper and the Ghostly Trio is a 2006 platform game developed by Data Design Interactive and published by Blast! Entertainment. [2] It is based on the Casper the Friendly Ghost character by Harvey Comics. The game was released for the PlayStation 2 exclusively in the PAL region, where it was unanimously panned by critics despite a low-key ...
In creating the voice for Brain, LaMarche says he looked at a picture of the character and immediately thought of Orson Welles, [17] although the character was not modeled after Welles. [18] Voicing Brain gave LaMarche the opportunity to make use of his signature impersonation of Welles. [19] Many Pinky and the Brain episodes are nods to Welles ...
Credited as "Jm J. Bullock" because there was another "Jim Bullock" in the actors union, [3] Bullock became a notable entertainment figure in the 1980s when he co-starred on the sitcom Too Close for Comfort as Monroe Ficus and was a regular guest on John Davidson's updated version of the game show Hollywood Squares; Bullock occasionally substituted for Davidson as host. [4]
Wendy: Every Witch Way is an action platform video game published by TDK Mediactive and developed by WayForward Technologies for the Game Boy Color in 2001. The game centers on Wendy the Good Little Witch from the Casper the Friendly Ghost series. Wendy accidentally opens her aunts' chest containing magical stones, which upset the gravity of a ...