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In the United States, Turbo was the top-grossing arcade game on the Play Meter arcade charts in May 1982, taking the top spot from Donkey Kong. [16] In Japan, Game Machine listed Turbo as the 18th highest-grossing arcade video game of 1981 (tied with Defender and Galaxian), [17] and then the 19th highest-grossing arcade video game of 1982. [18]
A video game based on the film, titled Turbo: Super Stunt Squad, was released on July 16, 2013, on Wii U, Wii, Nintendo 3DS, Nintendo DS, PlayStation 3, and Xbox 360. Published by D3 Publisher, the Xbox 360, PlayStation 3, and Wii U versions were developed by Monkey Bar Games. In the HD versions, the gameplay is similar to the Tony Hawk video ...
Torus Games D3 Turbo: Super Stunt Squad: 2013 [93] Wii U, Wii, PlayStation 3, Xbox 360 Monkey Bar Games D3 Turbo Racing League: 2013 [94] IOS: Dragons Adventure: 2013 [95] Nokia Lumia 2520: Dragons: Rise of Berk: 2014 [96] Android: Ludia, Inc. Ludia, Inc. How to Train Your Dragon 2: 2014 [97] Xbox 360, Nintendo 3DS, Wii, Wii U and PlayStation 3 ...
One of the first games to be developed for the DVD-ROM medium, the enhanced DVD edition featured twice the resolution of the CD-ROM version. In 1999, Red Orb Entertainment collected the Windows versions of The Journeyman Project Turbo!, Buried in Time, and Legacy of Time into an 8-disc trilogy box set.
Turbo (comics), a superheroine in the Marvel Comics universe; Turbo (Gobots), a fictional character in the Gobots cartoon and toy line; Turbo, a film character in Breakin' and Breakin' 2: Electric Boogaloo; Turbo, a character in Disney's Wreck-It Ralph; Turbo Norimaki, a fictional character from the anime and manga series Dr. Slump
Wreck-It Ralph appears in the 2019 video game Kingdom Hearts III as a Link. When summoned, he will place explosive blocks and destroy them, causing damage to nearby enemies. [9] A world based on Wreck-It Ralph was added to the 2017 mobile game Kingdom Hearts Union χ as part of an update in April 2019. The world adapts the events of the ...
It was one of America's top twelve best-selling arcade video games of 1994. [34] In the January 30, 1995 issue of Japanese magazine Gamest, Super Street Fighter II X (known as Super Turbo internationally) placed fourth place in the award for Best Game of 1994 and Best Fighting Game. [28]
Lotus Esprit Turbo Challenge was well received by the gaming press, which praised its feeling of speed, technical quality and two-player gameplay. The game in all its versions was rated around 80-90%. [1] It was the only title in the series that was released for an 8-bit platform - the later ones were 16-bit only.