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  2. Death Race (1990 video game) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Death_Race_(1990_video_game)

    The player may use money earned in the game to upgrade the car's engine, tires, chassis, guns, and missiles. Level completion requires capturing one to four flags, and then passing through the exit. The game has four difficulty levels : Rookie, Amateur, Professional, and World Class.

  3. Category:Race-related controversies in video games - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Category:Race-related...

    Pages in category "Race-related controversies in video games" The following 27 pages are in this category, out of 27 total. This list may not reflect recent changes. A.

  4. Death Race (1976 video game) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Death_Race_(1976_video_game)

    Death Race is an arcade driving video game developed and released by Exidy in the United States, first shipping to arcade distributors in April 1976. [2] The game was a modification of Exidy's 1975 game Destruction Derby in which players crashed into cars to accrue points. In Death Race, the objective became to run into "gremlins" to gain score ...

  5. List of racing video games - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_racing_video_games

    Car & Driver Presents: Grand Tour Racing '98: Eutechnyx: Activision: PS1: 1997-09-30 Car and Driver (video game) Lerner Research: Electronic Arts: DOS 1992 Car Town: Cie Games Glu Mobile: FMP, iOS 2010-07-27 Car Wars: Texas Instruments: Texas Instruments: TI-99/4A 1981 Carmageddon: Stainless Games: Sales Curve Interactive, Interplay Productions

  6. 1970s in video games - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/1970s_in_video_games

    The 1970s saw the development of some of the earliest video games, chiefly in the arcade game industry, but also several for the earliest video game consoles and personal computers. Notable games released in the 1970s included Computer Space , The Oregon Trail , Pong , Maze , Tank , Colossal Cave Adventure , Death Race , Sea Wolf , Breakout ...

  7. Racing game - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Racing_game

    Another notable EM game from the 1970s was The Driver, a racing-action game released by Kasco (Kansai Seiki Seisakusho Co.) that used 16 mm film to project full motion video on screen, though its gameplay had limited interaction, requiring the player to match their steering wheel, accelerator and brakes with movements shown on screen, much like ...

  8. World Cup mystery solved: Why players lie down to defend free ...

    www.aol.com/sports/world-cup-mystery-solved-why...

    The origins and history of lying down But last decade, the seeds for a solution were planted in Brazil. Ronaldinho brought under-wall free kicks to his homeland .

  9. Rally-X - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rally-X

    Rally-X (Japanese: ラリーX, Hepburn: Rarī-Ekkusu) is a maze chase arcade video game developed in Japan and Germany by Namco and released in 1980. In North America, it was distributed by Midway Manufacturing and in Europe by Karateco. Players drive a blue Formula One race car through a multidirectional scrolling maze to collect yellow flags ...