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Blam! Machinehead (released in the US as Machine Head) is a first-person shooter developed by Core Design and published by Eidos Interactive in North America and in Japan by Virgin Interactive Entertainment, and was released for Sega Saturn, MS-DOS, and PlayStation in 1996.
Micro Machines 2: Turbo Tournament is a 1994 racing video game developed by Supersonic Software and published by Codemasters for the Sega Mega Drive.The sequel to Micro Machines, the game is themed around Galoob's Micro Machines toys, and players race around environments in miniature toy vehicles.
On the first annual Game Machine arcade chart, Sea Wolf was the fifth highest-grossing arcade video game of 1976 in Japan, below Taito's Ball Park (Tornado Baseball) and Speed Race DX , Sega's Heavyweight Champ, and Breakout (licensed by Namco from Atari). [16] Sea Wolf eventually sold a total of 10,000 arcade cabinets.
A typical race in progress, Game Boy version. Micro Machines is a top-down racing game: players observe races from above. Players race in environments such as breakfast and pool tables, work desks, and treehouses, driving toy vehicles such as powerboats, helicopters, formula one cars, and tanks that can shoot other racers. [2]
Video game that feature a time-traveling element but not related to manipulation of the time stream should not be sorted into this category, they should be classified within Category:Video games about time travel. Furthermore, real-time games like real-time strategy or many simulation games that allow players to alter the speed of gameplay ...
Socket is a 2D side-scrolling platformer with speed-based gameplay similar to entries in the Sonic the Hedgehog series. At the start of a level, Socket, whose tail doubles as an extension cord, charges up with electricity, giving him the energy to move fast. Socket has an health bar, which slowly drains over time and causes death if it fully ...
Enjoy a classic game of Hearts and watch out for the Queen of Spades!
The first game in the series was developed by Free Radical Design and released in October 2000, alongside the launch of the PlayStation 2. [8] The game's story focuses around a temporal war against the TimeSplitters, creatures that use time crystals to travel through time, and by doing so, are disrupting human history.