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Ocean Software Ltd was a British software development company that became one of the biggest European video game developers and publishers of the 1980s and 1990s.. The company was founded by David Ward and Jon Woods and was based in Manchester.
Download as PDF; Printable version; In other projects ... Pages in category "Ocean Software games" The following 156 pages are in this category, out of 156 total.
The Master System. The Master System which was renamed with a redesigned casing from original Sega Mark III, which had been released in the Japanese market in 1985—is a video game console released by Sega in the North American market in September 1986 to compete with the Nintendo Entertainment System, which had been released in the same market in February 1986 (an earlier test market for NES ...
This is a list of the built-in games included with the Tec Toy Master System Collection 131 video game system released in Brazil in 2011. The collection contains both video games that were previously released for the Master System as well as new titles produced specifically for the system. Most of the re-releases emulate their original European ...
This is a list of personal computer games (video games for personal computers, including those running Windows, macOS, and Linux) that have sold or shipped at least one million copies. If a game was released on multiple platforms, the sales figures list are only for PC sales.
View from the TIALD pod of a Eurofighter during a laser-guided bombing run in TFX. The game features an instant-action arcade mode, custom missions, and a campaign mode. The player can fly three aircraft: The Eurofighter Typhoon, the F-22 and the F-117, and can customize payload for each aircraft.
PC Answers was a computer magazine published in the United Kingdom by Future plc. It was notable for its focus on the technical side of computing. It ran several series of articles on overclocking, a "Danger! Don't Try This At Home!" section which reviewed hardware projects such as the Stone Soupercomputer and Tomohiro Kawada's dual Celeron PC.
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