Alicia and Greg set off with their friends one Halloween night to look for a house in the forest where they could stock up on goodies. Upon reaching the house, Greg and Alicia's friends are turned into stone by a bogeyman. To save their friends, the two heroes must enter the world of the dead. In order to find their friends and set them free, they need to make it through cemeteries, haunted houses and sinister laboratories. Only one person at a time is allowed to enter the world of the dead, so Alicia and Greg must take turns in order to make their way through the danger that awaits them. Friends like the Goblin and Jack O'Lantern will teach them magic tricks that will help them to overcome obstacles along the way. They must find the Mad Scientist's laboratory to get their friends home safe and sound.
The Legend of Zelda: The Wind Waker is the first Zelda game for the Nintendo GameCube and also the first in the series to employ cel-shading, a lighting and texturing technique that results in the game having a cartoon-like appearance. Like its predecessors, The Wind Waker is an action game with puzzle-solving and light role-playing elements. Basic gameplay mechanics are similar to those found in Ocarina of Time, but it differentiates itself with its massive Great Sea which must be explored using a boat named King of Red Lions.
It's hip, daddy-o! Are you a fan of puzzle games and Vegas fifties-style fruit machines? Then TipTop is right up your alley!
Match and clear all the slots, use magnets (pull a column up), anvils (push a column down), Jokers, Dynamite and "Color Bombs" (get rid of various items), bombs and other special blocks to score crazy combos, but don't break the bank!
It's a blast!
The first game in the Outlaw series of sports titles, Outlaw Golf is what you get when you take the classic game of golf and throw in lesbian strippers, wannabe rappers, ex cons and other wild personalities. The game has a bad attitude chock full of sexual themes and language that puts Happy Gilmore to shame.
Outlaw Golf pits you as one of ten over-the-top golfing personalities (paired with equally over-the-top caddies) to compete in over 30 different tour events from where you attempt to unlock new characters, better clubs and balls as well as improving your golfer's skills along the way with 12 different mini-games. The game also sports a composure response system, which simply means that when you do well, the game is easier and when you aren't doing so well you will find your shots not going exactly where you want them. Composure too low? Beat up your caddy and you can relieve some of that stress to regain your lost composure. Multiplayer supports 8 different game modes, including stroke play, match play, skins
A drifting-focused racing game for Xbox that pits players in narrow mountain pass (touge) duels. Emphasizing precision driving and car tuning, Touge R was only released in Japan.
"Gunvari Collection + Time Crisis" is a compilation game released for the PlayStation 2 on December 12, 2002. Developed and published by Namco, this collection includes four arcade shooting titles: GunBullet, GunBarl, GunBalina, and the original Time Crisis. It is designed specifically for the Japanese market (NTSC-J) and is compatible with the GunCon2 light gun, enhancing the shooting game experience.
The game package offers a mix of classic arcade shooters, converting them for home console play at an attractive price. The GunCon2 compatibility allows players to use a more precise and responsive light gun for these games, providing a nostalgic and immersive gameplay experience akin to the arcade versions.
Agaki Yami ni Oritatta Tensai: A character-driven mahjong game based on comics 1 through 6 in the Akagi series. Players become Akagi as he takes on opponent after opponent in strategic mahjong battles. The game features also other game modes like free mahjong mode, but the main mode is the story mode in which the player will advance through the story that is divided into stages winning mahjong matches.
Gallop Racer 2003 (known as "Gallop Racer 6: Revolution" in Japan) is an update of it's previous incarnations with the standard modes (exhibition and season mode) and has six different jockeys to choose for the players character in the season mode as well as 32 different tracks and over 3000 different horses.
Players can breed horses using a series of mini-games, the outcome, either good or bad, will determine the type of horse, the better the player is at the mini-games, the more powerful the breed will be. Also the player can bet on races in the season mode, using the proceeds to buy better facilities to train their stable. It also features an extensive training program for new players to the Gallop series.
Clock Tower 3 is a survival horror video game co-developed by Capcom and Sunsoft for the PlayStation 2. Released in 2002, it is the fourth installment in the Clock Tower series, and the first and only video game directed by Japanese film director Kinji Fukasaku. The plot and characters have very little relation with the previous Clock Tower games. The story follows 14-year-old Alyssa Hamilton who is part of a family lineage of female warriors who travel through time to defeat evil spirits. Alyssa travels from her time in 2003 London to the 1940s and 1960s in order to defeat these "Entities" and bring peace to troubled souls.
.Hack//Outbreak is the third of a series of four games, titled .hack//Infection, .hack//Mutation, .hack//Outbreak, and .hack//Quarantine, features a "game within a game"; a fictional massively multiplayer online role-playing game (MMORPG) called The World which does not require the player to connect to the Internet. Players may transfer their characters and data between games in the series. Each game comes with an extra DVD containing an episode of .hack//Liminality, the accompanying original video animation series which details fictional events that occur concurrently with the games.
The games are part of a multimedia franchise called Project .hack which explores the mysterious origins of The World. Set after the events of the anime series .hack//Sign, the games focus on a player named Kite and his quest to discover why some users have become comatose as a result of playing The World. The search evolves into a deeper investigation of The World and its effects on the stability of the Internet.
On a dark and gloomy bridge, suspended between the world of the living and the dead, lurks Raikoh, a skilled warrior from a cursed clan. Once tasked with ending the lives of others, Raikoh himself sits between life and death after the Great Seal was broken, spreading destruction and darkness across the land. A mysterious princess spares Raikoh's life so that he may rid the world of the grotesque demons and cleanse his soul of his past misdeeds. Raikoh must travel through desolate lands to fight hordes of fearsome, immortal creatures with 12 varieties of magic, more than 30 brutal weapons, and over 10 special demon-slaying items. Trees, walls, and even entire buildings are destroyed as Raikoh unleashes his skillful fury in order to purge both the world's demons and his own.
Travel thousands of years into the future to the galaxy Theophilus. As Sho, your job is to solve the mystery of countless murders that have been committed by an invading alien force. Along the way, you'll decimate hordes of alien creatures and liquid-morphing enemies with customized blaster rifles and plasma swords. Summon the power of Neo-Psionics to blast through hordes of alien menaces in a single move. Now, with Crimson Sea's Phantom Sensor System, use sound and touch to discover the hidden enemy.
The Getaway is a sandbox crime game set in London. It is inspired by British gangland films Get Carter and Snatch. Initially, the release of the game was to coincide with the launch of the PlayStation 2 in 2000, but was delayed by 27 months due to the difficulty of re-creating large areas of London in high resolution. Parts of The Getaway feature in various episodes of Graham Duff's Ideal.
Samurai Jack in Desert Quest was a Macromedia Shockwave Toonami game that was available to play on cartoonnetwork.com beginning in 2002. However, the game did not appear on toonami.com until 2004. The game is no longer available at cartoonnetwork.com, but has been archived by fans.