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Total Drivin, known as Car & Driver Presents: Grand Tour Racing '98 in North America, Gekisou!!!Grand Racing [a] in Japan and as M6 Turbo Racing in France (as a tie-in to the M6 motoring show), is a 1997 racing video game developed by British company Eutechnyx exclusively for PlayStation, [2] their first release under this name having previously been named Merit Studios.
In the United States, Turbo was the top-grossing arcade game on the Play Meter arcade charts in May 1982, taking the top spot from Donkey Kong. [16] In Japan, Game Machine listed Turbo as the 18th highest-grossing arcade video game of 1981 (tied with Defender and Galaxian), [17] and then the 19th highest-grossing arcade video game of 1982. [18]
Al Unser Jr. Arcade Racing: Mindscape Bordeaux: Mindscape: WIN, OS X 1995 Al Unser Jr.'s Road to the Top: Radical Entertainment: Mindscape: SNES 1994-11 Al Unser Jr.'s Turbo Racing: Data East: Data East: NES 1990-03 Alex Kidd BMX Trial: Sega: Sega: SMS 1987-11-15 Alfa Romeo Racing Italiano: Milestone: Valcon Games, Black Bean Games WIN, PS2 ...
Turbo Racing may refer to: Hot Wheels Turbo Racing, a Nintendo 64 video game; Al Unser Jr.'s Turbo Racing, NES video game This page was last edited on 13 ...
Hot Wheels Turbo Racing is a racing video game released for the Nintendo 64 and PlayStation in 1999. It features 40 cars based on the Hot Wheels series of toys. It also features Kyle Petty 's 1999 NASCAR stock car, as it was sponsored by Hot Wheels.
A free mobile game titled Turbo Racing League (renamed Turbo F.A.S.T, based on the TV series) was developed by PikPok and was released on May 16, 2013, for iOS, Android, and Windows Phone 8 devices. Played as a snail, the game allows players to race against time and collect tomatoes to earn upgrades.
Al Unser Jr.'s Turbo Racing is a racing video game released by Data East for the Nintendo Entertainment System in 1990. It is an adaptation of the 1989 Japanese-market Famicom game World Grand Prix - Pole to Finish (ワールドグランプリ ポールトゥフィニッシュ, Wārudo Guran Puri Pōru tu Finisshu), with the most notable changes being the addition of Unser as an in-game coach ...
In April 1966 Rowe received a second gold record for the sales of "Que Sera, Sera". [40] In August 1966 Rowe won Radio 5KA's annual best male vocal award for "Que Sera, Sera". [41] In 2006 Rowe released a newly recorded version, which was released by ABC via iTunes, and later adding "the whole digital mix with a radio mix and a dance mix". [42]