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Frogger is a Japanese video game series published and owned by Konami, and developed by multiple studios. The series generally involves a frog trying to travel across roads and rivers of high traffic and danger. The first game in the series was the 1981 arcade game Frogger, and
Frogger [a] is a 1981 arcade action game developed by Konami and published by Sega. [5] In North America, it was distributed by Sega/Gremlin.The object of the game is to direct five frogs to their homes by dodging traffic on a busy road, then crossing a river by jumping on floating logs and alligators.
Morning Star Multimedia was an American video game company founded in May 1995 by Dan Kitchen. [1] It was acquired by the Telegen Corporation in 1996 as a wholly owned subsidiary. It was known for releasing Frogger for the Sega Genesis when Majesco rereleased the console in 1998 (known as the Genesis 3). Its last game was released in 2000, so ...
We've got a veritable electronic entertainment expo of Engadget Show goodness coming at you this month, including an interview with the directors of the award winning documentary, Indie Game: The ...
Crossy Road is an action game released on November 20, 2014. It was developed and published on iOS by Australian video game developer Hipster Whale and originally yodo1 on Android. The name and concept of the game play on the riddle joke "Why did the chicken cross the road?" [3] It has been described as endless runner version of the 1981 video ...
The game was a commercial success. By early 1998, it had sold nearly 1 million units in North America. [5] Worldwide, the game sold 4 million units by May 2000. [6] The PlayStation version sold 3.37 million units in North America, [7] resulting in the game being one of the best-selling PlayStation titles of all time and subsequently seeing a re-release on the Sony's Greatest Hits lineup.
Frogger Beyond, known in Japan as Frogger (フロッガー, Furoggā), is a 2002 video game from Konami, released for GameCube and Xbox in 2002–2003, for Windows in March 2003 in North America, and for PlayStation 2 in June 2003. It is a sequel in the Frogger series of games.
[2] [3] Andrew King of TheGamer considered the game to be "the first really good Frogger game since Frogger 2". [2] The game's setting and graphics were also described as an improvement from the previous games, with credit given to the toy theme, music and special effects. [3] [4] [2] Tyler Woodward from TouchArcade praised new mechanics and ...