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Gumball is a video game written for the Apple II by Veda Hlubinka-Cook (credited as Robert Cook) and published by Broderbund in 1983. It was ported to the Atari 8-bit computers , and Commodore 64 . The player controls the valves of a maze-like machine to sort gumballs by color.
Ghostbusters (1984 video game) Gnome Ranger; Golden Oldies: Volume 1 - Computer Software Classics; Golf Challenge; The Goonies (1985 video game) Gorf; Gossip; Grand Prix Simulator; The Great American Cross-Country Road Race; Gridrunner; Guderian; The Guild of Thieves; Gulf Strike; Gumball; Gun Fight; Guns of Fort Defiance; Gyruss
Independent of the Genesis, the 32X used its own ROM cartridges and had its own library of games, as well as two 32-bit central processing unit chips and a 3D graphics processor. [1] Despite these changes, the console failed to attract either developers or consumers as the Sega Saturn had already been announced for release the next year. [1]
The following list contains all of the known games released commercially for the Amiga CD32 platform. Unveiled at the September's 1993 World of Commodore show, the CD32 is based on the Amiga 1200 and Commodore had plans to distribute the console in the United States at US$ 399.99 with two pack-in games as well as six separately sold launch ...
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MAME (formerly an acronym of Multiple Arcade Machine Emulator) is a free and open-source emulator designed to recreate the hardware of arcade games, video game consoles, old computers and other systems in software on modern personal computers and other platforms. [1]
The back cover of Door Door's NEC PC-8801 version, featuring a photo and resume of Koichi Nakamura. Enix was a Japanese video game publishing company founded in September 1975 by Yasuhiro Fukushima. Initially a tabloid publisher named Eidansha Boshu Service Center, in 1982 it ventured into video game publishing for Japanese home computers such ...
Note: All 268 issues (up to Nov 2006) of Computer Gaming World have been released for free download at cgwmuseum.org. Unless otherwise prefixed/stated, the listed games have reviews in the given issues, usually a full page or more. It later became Games for Windows: The Official Magazine after last issue of #268.