Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
The 3DO is a 32-bit hardware platform designed primarily for home video game consoles, developed by The 3DO Company, released in North America by Panasonic first on October 4, 1993. [1] The following list contains all of the known games released for the 3DO platform as well as aftermarket ( homebrew and/or independently-developed) titles ...
RetroArch is a free and open-source, cross-platform frontend for emulators, game engines, video games, media players and other applications. It is the reference implementation of the libretro API, [2] [3] designed to be fast, lightweight, portable and without dependencies. [4]
3DO (3 Dimensional Optics) is a video gaming hardware format developed by The 3DO Company and conceived by entrepreneur and Electronic Arts founder Trip Hawkins. [9] [10] [11] The specifications were originally designed by Dave Needle and RJ Mical of New Technology Group, and were licensed by third parties; most hardware were packaged as home video game consoles under the name Interactive ...
Panasonic M2, earlier known as 3DO M2, is a multimedia terminal and cancelled video game console.It was initially developed by The 3DO Company as a peripheral chip for the 3DO hardware before turning into a standalone successor system.
Crash 'N Burn was developed as a launch title for the 3DO platform (pictured: a Panasonic model). Crystal Dynamics was formed on July 8, 1992, by Sega veterans Judy Lange, Madeline Canepa, and Dave Morse. Crystal was the first licensed developer for 3DO, a gaming hardware platform simultaneously funded by Kleiner Perkins.
It was a pack-in game for Panasonic models of the 3DO later in the console's life. It is the first in the Gex series of video games, and introduces players to the title character, a wisecracking, television-obsessed gecko voiced by comedian Dana Gould , who must venture through the "Media Dimension" and defeat Rez, the overlord of the dimension ...
The 3DO Blaster is an add-on produced by Creative Labs from 1994 designed to allow compatible Windows-based PCs to play 3DO format games. It is a full-sized ISA compatibility card with the 3DO logic board included, with the input (controllers) and output (video & audio) redirected to the PC.
The 3DO Rating System was a rating system created by The 3DO Company and used on games released for the 3DO Interactive Multiplayer. The rating system, which went into use in March 1994, uses the following four categories: [23] E - Everyone; 12 - Guidance for age 12 & under; 16 - Guidance for age 16 & under (Japan Only) 17 - Guidance for age 17 ...