Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Pengo (video game) Penguin Adventure; Penguin Land; Penguin Wars; Penguins & Friends: Hey! That's My Fish! The Penguins of Madagascar (video game) The Penguins of Madagascar: Dr. Blowhole Returns – Again! Pingus
The scene where the killer whale tips the slab of ice to eat the penguins is a reference to the final scene of the 1977 film Orca. When Bender suffers an electric shock upon landing head-first on a slab of ice after being attacked by an orca, he whistles one of R2-D2’s signature beeps.
This list of fictional penguins is subsidiary to the list of fictional birds and is a collection of various notable penguin characters that appear in various works of fiction. It is limited to well-referenced examples of penguins in literature , film , television , comics , animation , and video games .
The Penguin first appears in Batman: The Animated Series (1992), where he is served by several henchmen - Jay, Raven, Eagleton, Falcone, and Sheldrake - as well as trained birds. The Penguin appears in The New Batman Adventures, in which he has founded the Iceberg Lounge and seemingly reformed while secretly continuing his criminal activities.
The game was an EXE file and was easily distributed as an attachment to emails. [6] According to Media Metrix, among the 54 million people playing PC games in the month of December 2000, Elf Bowling was the game to hit the top 10 with 7.6 million players that was not bundled with Windows. [7]
In 1998, Pikiinya!EX (ピキーニャ! EX) was released for the PlayStation.The game was released with added cutscenes. There was also a mobile version of the game released on what looked like a virtual pet key chain thing, which was supposed to be a promotional item with the game in LCD format, [citation needed] but it didn't do too well.
Computer and Video Games (C&VG) magazine gave it a highly positive review upon release, calling it "the cutest of coin-operated video games" and praising the "wonderful graphics, delightful characterisation, plenty of scope to work out your own" tactics, "catchy melody" and "that feeling of satisfaction you get when an ice-block picks up speed ...
A cutscene or event scene (sometimes in-game cinematic or in-game movie) is a sequence in a video game that is not interactive, interrupting the gameplay. Such scenes are used to show conversations between characters, set the mood, reward the player, introduce newer models and gameplay elements, show the effects of a player's actions, create ...