Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
In this gameplay screenshot, the player character (a bull shark) is hunting an alligator.. The game is an action role-playing game played from a third-person perspective.The player assumes control of a baby bull shark who must take revenge on a shark hunter named Scaly Pete, who killed its mother and disfigured it. [1]
How To Survive - Third Person Standalone was announced on June 4, 2015. It is an expansion pack in which players play the game in a third-person perspective, as opposed to the top-down perspective of the original How to Survive. [22] A sequel, How to Survive 2, was announced on August 28, 2015. It features enhanced graphics and an expanded home ...
Later Alligator is a 2019 point-and-click adventure game developed by American [1] studio Pillow Fight in collaboration with SmallBü Animation.The game tasks players with exploring Alligator New York City and playing various mini-games to solve a mystery.
Where's My Water? is a puzzle video game developed by American studio Creature Feep and published by Disney Mobile, a subsidiary of Disney Interactive Studios.Released for desktop web browsers and devices using iOS, Android, Windows Phone and BlackBerry 10 [1] operating systems, the game has its players route a supply of water to an alligator.
Year Title Developer Original platform(s) Notes 1982: Survival Island: Starpath: Atari 2600: 1985: The Oregon Trail (1985 video game) MECC: Apple IIe, DOS, Windows 3.x, Classic Mac OS, Windows, Dedicated handheld
Gator Panic [a] is a redemption arcade game released in 1988 by Namco in Japan and Data East in North America. The game plays very much like Whac-A-Mole , but features alligators coming out of the cabinet horizontally instead of moles coming out vertically.
Until Dawn is a 2015 interactive drama horror game developed by Supermassive Games and published by Sony Computer Entertainment.Players assume control of eight young adults who have to survive on Blackwood Mountain when their lives are threatened.
A real time version of Chase called Logan was ported to the HP-2000 by Jim Burnes at St. Louis University High School. It used the 2D addressable cursor of a VT52 video terminal to generate the play field. It became so popular that it monopolized the entire computer center within a month and was subsequently deleted off the system.