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Juanito Ibarra is a boxing and mixed martial arts trainer, predominantly known for his work with champions in boxing such as Oscar De La Hoya and in MMA such as Quinton "Rampage" Jackson. [1] Ibarra and Jackson parted ways after his loss at UFC 86. [2] [3] Ibarra was ranked #469 on the "Boxings 500 best trainers" list.
Rampage is a 1986 arcade video game developed and published by Bally Midway. [5] Inspired by monster films , players control a trio of monsters: George, Lizzie, and Ralph, humans transformed into creatures due to various experimental mishaps.
Rampage World Tour is an arcade video game released by Midway Games in 1997 as the sequel to Rampage. It was developed at Game Refuge by Brian Colin and Jeff Nauman, who designed the 1986 original. Ports were released for the Sega Saturn , Nintendo 64 , Game Boy Color , PlayStation , and Microsoft Windows .
The Nintendo Wii version also has a clip from the Cartoon Network TV series The Grim Adventures of Billy & Mandy. In addition to the Cartoon Network clip, the Wii version features another city , ten more monsters (three of which had appeared in previous Rampage games, those being V.E.R.N, Boris, and Ruby), and a fifth upgrade (Super Jump).
Rampage: Total Destruction (2006) - Scumlabs has developed a new soda which turns 30 (40 in the Wii version) people into monsters. While most of them have been placed in cryo-tubes, some have escaped and go on a rampage around the world while freeing those in the cryo-tubes. Rampage (2018) - Adapted from the film, serves as a reboot to the series.
[8] [9] The add-on was available for download on Interplay's online store, but users had to pay $1 with a credit card to ensure that the buyer of the add-on was of adult age. The add-on was included on the CD for the Mac OS version. The Early Years is a limited version of Redneck Rampage, which allows players to play the first five levels. It ...
The game's setting is Meeple City, represented by a physical game board on which are built several "buildings" constructed out of cardboard "floors" and held up by wooden meeple figures.
The PlayStation version of the game differs from the Nintendo 64 one as the former features full-motion video cutscenes and different music for the Asian and European levels, whereas the latter version does not feature cutscenes and re-uses the music used for the North American levels for the European and Asian ones. [3]