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ESPN Extreme Games (released in Japan as ESPN Street Games) is a game released for the PlayStation in 1995. A version was released for MS-DOS a short time later. The game featured all the sports included in the Summer X-Games of 1995, but it did not feature events such as the half pipe in skateboarding.
Dengeki PSP Dengeki PSP was another special edition version of Dengeki PlayStation that, like Dengeki PS2 was published only a few times a year and in irregular intervals. The magazine mainly features information on the PlayStation Portable, and was published between December 3, 2004 and October 21, 2011. Dengeki Girl's Style
3Xtreme was developed by 989 Sports, with Ed Loonam as the product manager.The idea was to incorporate the speed pace from ESPN Extreme Games, while keeping some fighting elements from 2Xtreme. [6]
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Sony Net Yaroze with software development kit. The Net Yaroze (ネットやろうぜ, Netto Yarōze) is a development kit for the PlayStation video game console.It was a promotion by Sony Computer Entertainment to computer programming hobbyists which launched in June 1996 in Japan [1] and in 1997 in other countries. [2]
It is a PSP port of Dead or Alive Xtreme 2 for the Xbox 360, [1] expanding upon the activities available in the original which consisted of mainly beach-related minigames. It was the first game in the series to be released for the portable game system, as well as the first release from the series since the departure of series' creator Tomonobu ...
This is a list of downloadable TurboGrafx-16 (PC Engine) games to be purchased from the PlayStation Store for Sony's PlayStation 3 (PS3), PlayStation Portable (PSP) and PlayStation Vita (PSV) video game consoles.
ProDG for PSP® was released in 2004, [4] [5] using SNC technology licensed from Apogee. It included the v2.0 debugger, SNC C/C++ Compiler and Tuner as standard. The majority of North American launch titles for Sony Computer Entertainment's PSP® (PlayStation®Portable) were developed using the ProDG suite of tools.