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Fuzz, the Slang term for the police, possibly deriving from a mispronunciation or corruption of the phrase "the police force" or "the force". It may also refer to police radio static. The term was used in the title Hot Fuzz, a 2007 police-comedy film and Peter Peachfuzz from The Adventures of Rocky and Bullwinkle.
The Crew (video game) Crime Cities; Crime Fighters; Crime Patrol (video game) Crime Patrol 2: Drug Wars; Crime Scene (video game) CrimeWave; Criminal Case (video game) Criminal Minds (video game) Critical Ops; Crossfire (2007 video game) Crow Country; Cruise for a Corpse; Cry of Fear; CSI: Crime City; CSI: 3 Dimensions of Murder; CSI: Crime ...
Universal Studios devised a gimmick where moviegoers were not allowed to enter the theater at the moment the football game's two-minute warning began in the film. Another film with a similar disaster-at-the-Super Bowl theme, Black Sunday , was released the following April to decent reviews but poor box office.
The game was popular to the point of addiction, [2] with lines forming around the machines and often resulting in fights over who would play next. The machines were visited by men in black , who collected unknown data from the machines, [ 2 ] allegedly testing responses to the game's psychoactive effects.
Looking Glass Studios, Inc. (formerly Blue Sky Productions and LookingGlass Technologies, Inc.) was an American video game developer based in Cambridge, Massachusetts.The company was founded by Paul Neurath with Ned Lerner as Blue Sky Productions in 1990, and merged with Lerner's Lerner Research in 1992 to become LookingGlass Technologies.
Video games were still considered to be adult entertainment at this point, and treated as with pinball machines as games of skill, "For Amusement Only", and placed in locations that children would likely not be at such as bar and lounges. However, the same stigma that pinball machines had seen in the prior decades became to appear for video games.
Bertie the Brain was a video game version of tic-tac-toe, built by Dr. Josef Kates for the 1950 Canadian National Exhibition. [1] Kates had previously worked at Rogers Majestic designing and building radar tubes during World War II, then after the war pursued graduate studies in the computing center at the University of Toronto while continuing to work at Rogers Majestic. [2]
The 1990s was the third decade in the industry's history.It was a decade of marked innovation in video gaming. [1] It was a decade of transition from sprite-based graphics to full-fledged 3D graphics [1] and it gave rise to several genres of video games including, but not limited to, the first-person shooter, real-time strategy, survival horror, and MMO. [1]