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OpenArena's gameplay mirrors that of Quake III Arena with some quality of life improvements, such as awarding a character points for pushing another character to their death. The game can be played online (against other human players) or offline (against computer-controlled characters known as bots ).
The most recent arena football game is Arena Football: Road to Glory, which was released on February 21, 2007. It was a sequel to the 2006 EA Sports title Arena Football . To date, although several arena football leagues have come and gone, the only one to have lent a license to a video game product was the first version of the Arena Football ...
The game is similar to EA's other simulation football games (NCAA Football and Madden NFL), but adopts a style of play that is similar to the faster and more frantic paced Arena game. The game includes all the rules, rosters, and teams for the 2006 AFL season. A sequel, Arena Football: Road to Glory was made the following year for the PS2 only. [1]
K-1 The Arena Fighters, known in Japan as Fighting Illusion 〜K-1 GRAND PRIX〜, is a video game developed by Japanese studio Daft Co. and published by Xing Entertainment and THQ for the PlayStation in 1996-1997.
Battle Arena Toshinden 2, or Toshinden 2 (闘神伝2) in Japan, is a 1995 fighting video game developed by Tamsoft and published by Takara.Unlike the original Battle Arena Toshinden which was only for home systems, this sequel was originally a coin-operated arcade game for the Sony ZN-1 hardware, released in November 1995 and distributed by Capcom [10] before its port to PlayStation shortly ...
[5] Fran Mirabella III of IGN, who rated it a 2.5 out of 10, called the game "nothing more than basic dodgeball -- the kind you used to play in the schoolyard -- in a shiny Disney/Pixar package." [ 3 ] Mirabella noted the game's young target audience and simplistic gameplay, calling it "mind-numbingly and laughably boring."
The Arena mode is split into two versions. On the game's first disc, several Arena matches are built into the story, whereas the second disc, titled EX Arena, covers the majority of the Arena gameplay separate from the core story. A "Ranker MK" mode on EX Arena allows players to customize opponents in special matches. [4]
Word-of-mouth did the trick. The game-starved RPG fans looked at Arena, loved it, and spread the word. Sales rocketed; awards and accolades rained down. Today, more than eighteen months after publication, the game is still selling and still being played avidly. [18] Arena was originally released on CD-ROM and 3.5" floppy disk. The CD-ROM ...