Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Peter Jackson's King Kong: The Official Game of the Movie (also known as Peter Jackson's King Kong, or simply King Kong) is a 2005 action-adventure video game developed by Ubisoft Montpellier and published by Ubisoft, based on the 2005 film King Kong.
Lionhead Studios Limited was a British video game developer founded in July 1997 by Peter Molyneux, Mark Webley, Tim Rance, and Steve Jackson.The company is best known for the Black & White and Fable series.
The Lord of the Rings (film series) video games (14 P, 25 F) Pages in category "Video games based on works by Peter Jackson" This category contains only the following page.
The game was released on Xbox Game Pass in October 2021. [1] [2] The game is named for the painting The Procession to Calvary by Pieter Bruegel the Elder. Like its predecessor, the game's visuals are composed of elements from classic European paintings, mainly from the Middle Ages and Renaissance.
Peter Pan: Adventures in Never Land (also known as Peter Pan in Return to Never Land in North America) is a 2002 action game developed by Doki Denki and published by Sony Computer Entertainment for the PlayStation. Disney Interactive released the game on Windows. It was released as a tie-in to Return to Never Land.
The 2010s saw the release of three darker and more violent Middle-earth video games that were rated Mature by the ESRB. The first of such games was The Lord of the Rings: War in the North, an action role-playing game that takes place in Northern Middle-earth. It was developed by Snowblind Studios and released on 1 November 2011.
Kingdom Hearts 358. The Kingdom Hearts series is long and often a bit confusing, having run for over 20 years with a dozen or so main series games that jump all over the place in the timeline.
This is a list of Middle-earth video games.It includes both video games based directly on J. R. R. Tolkien's books about Middle-earth, and those derived from The Lord of the Rings and The Hobbit films by New Line Cinema and Warner Bros. which in turn were based on Tolkien's novels of the same name.