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Microsoft Windows: Looney Tunes: Cosmic Capers Animated Jigsaw Puzzle: Looney Tunes: Sunsoft: 1999 Game Boy Color: Baby Looney Tunes Carnival: Jaleco: Arcade (medal game) Looney Tunes: Cosmic Capers: SouthPeak Interactive: Microsoft Windows: Looney Tunes PhotoFun [1] MGI Software Corp Looney Tunes Racing: Infogrames: 2000: Game Boy Color ...
Television series or movie Game title Platform(s) Aaahh!!! Real Monsters: Aaahh!!! Real Monsters: Mega Drive / Genesis, SNES: Aladdin: Disney's Aladdin: Sega Genesis, SNES, Game Boy, MS-DOS, Amiga, NES, Game Gear, Master System
The object of the game is to collect all the gears scattered around the levels and progress through all four different eras. The gameplay plays much the same as Bugs Bunny: Lost in Time, retaining Bugs' traits, but introducing new ones to Taz, as well as a co-op mode where one player can control Bugs, with the other controlling Taz; alternatively, the game can be played in single-player, with ...
Sylvester & Tweety: Breakfast on the Run, known as Looney Tunes: Twouble! in North America, is a 2D and isometric, pseudo-3D platform video game developed by Bit Managers and published by Infogrames for the Game Boy Color in 1998. It features the Looney Tunes characters Sylvester and Tweety.
The game's first expansion, Lost Identities was released in 2001. In 2004, Looney Labs released Early American Chrononauts (EAC), a prequel version of Chrononauts, [6] and introduced "Gadgets," a new card type. [7] The game's second edition was published in 2009. The Gore Years expansion set was issued that year also. [6]
The game was met with average to mixed reception, as GameRankings gave it a score of 68.33% for the PlayStation version, [7] and 53.75% for the PC version. [8] Many critics complimented its faithfulness to the Looney Tunes source material, although some disparaged certain technicalities from its controls and camera; the PC port was further ...
Warner Bros. Games (formerly known as Warner Bros. Interactive Entertainment) is an American video game development and publishing company that is a division of the Global Streaming & Interactive Entertainment unit of Warner Bros. Discovery. The company has published numerous video games based on both licensed properties as well as original ...
[3] [6] Reviewing the PS2 version for X-Play, Skyler Miller gave the game a 2 out of 5, criticising the graphics, calling them "mediocre at best". They additionally thought the camera was difficult to use and concluded that "In the end, 'Looney Tunes: Back in Action' feels like a generic platformer with Looney Tunes characters pasted on top of it.