Young Gretchen could have only imagined the fanciful events that were to occur before finding herself lost in a winter wonderland.
A piece of interactive fiction written by Laura Knauth.
A point-and-click adventure and digital learning game for physics.
The player moves through several levels and has to investigate different locations, collect objects and use them in other places and solve physics puzzles in order to progress through the game. The narrated knowledge base covers the following areas of physics: optics, mechanics, acoustics, electricity and thermodynamics.
One of the latest versions on this series. This version introduced more features like "Euromanager" and merchandising, as well like restaurants, bars and more.
The database was improved one more time and more international versions were shipped.
RC de Go! is an arcade racing video game developed by Taito Corporation, first released to Japanese arcades in 1999 for Taito's G-NET system. It was later released for the PlayStation, with publishing in North America and PAL territories handled by Acclaim Entertainment.
You Don't Know Jack: Offline is the 5th volume in the You Don't Know Jack Series. Most of its questions were taken from the You Don't Know Jack NetShow that ran from 1996 to 2000.
World Neverland 2: Pluto Kyouwakoku Monogatari is the second installment in the World Neverland series.
Immerse yourself in the life of an ordinary citizen in the fantasy Waktic Republic of Pluto. Unlike traditional epic quests or world-spanning adventures, this game focuses on the simplicity of everyday life. Choose a profession, work, get married, raise kids, and eventually retire. At the beginning of the game, players have the freedom to explore the local area by navigating town with the D-pad and adjusting the screen size using the analog stick. Engage in activities like sword attacks with the "X" button and interact with fellow citizens using the "O" button. The passage of time occurs naturally, transitioning from day to night as you wander around town.
Standing idly in the middle of town allows you to observe other citizens going about their daily routines. Occasionally, someone may approach your character, initiating a conversation or challenging you to a duel in a basic ring. The player's role is crucial
In the game, players must travel around the world to different cities solving various kinds of puzzles to capture the seven "tricksters" - Maui, Puck, Eris, Coyote, Monkey, Anansi and Raven. Each trickster has a challenge puzzle after finding all the missing box pieces, acquired by solving the puzzle with each piece behind it in each city. The location of the pieces is randomized each game. The game offers sporadic bonuses. Hints are used to find where one piece goes if the player needs help figuring it out. Free puzzle tokens solve puzzles for the player if needed. A free puzzle token is awarded for every ten puzzles solved.
Crackin’ DJ is a DJ simulation machine where you have to scrach to the music. Your controls include 2 turntables and a fader. There are 20 songs including a lesson tune and 2 hidden songs. One of the bonus tunes is a remake of the « outrun » theme song. The « Beats » fall down in columns on the left and right side. When the beat hits the horizontal line, that is when you start scraching. The music is accompanied by animated videos that are shown in the background. The game is very « ghetto ». Most of the tunes are generic Rap and R&B songs created by « Hiro » from Sega’s music development team.
Crackin DJ was only released as a dedicated cabinet in very limited numbers in Japan. There are less 5 than Crackin DJ machines in the USA as of July 2003.
Stephen King's F13 is a collection of casual games developed by Presto Studios and released in 2000 by Blue Byte. The title F13 suggests a function key that would follow F12 on standard PC keyboards.
The minigames include No Swimming, Bug Splat, and Whack-A-Zombie. The "Frightware" bundle also includes a set of "Screamsavers", "Bump and Thump" sound effects, "Deathtop" backgrounds, and Stephen King's short novella Everything's Eventual.
Stephen King's F13 decks out your computer with a horror aesthetic, offering "deathtop" images, "screamsavers," and a trio of minigames. The capper is a novella entitled Everything's Eventual, a story that brings King's usual themes into a high-tech context.
Hot Wheels: Crash! is a Hot Wheels game released for PC in 1999. It was the fifth Hot Wheels video game.
The object of the game, as the title states, is to crash cars into buildings and structures in each level in order to earn points, with 100 being the goal. The game includes a total of 12 different vehicles and 25 different levels. There are 3 difficulties, and on each difficulty, there are 6 levels. Once 100 points have been scored on each level on any given difficulty , a 7th level for that difficulty is unlocked, which in turn unlocks a special level afterwards. Once every special level for each difficulty has been fully completed, a final level is unlocked. There were also six downloadable levels available by entering the password "1234", though the downloadable levels are now lost due to the shutdown of the site.
Xenic places you in a ZX-G Firefly Type F fighter. Viewed from slightly above and behind the spaceship, the camera scrolls into a 3-D environment in all directions. There are seven levels to negotiate situated above huge crowded cities on earth, earth's oceans, space and on the futuristic world of Morzique. A striking feature is the fighter cannot collide with the backgrounds. This is a good thing, though, as from the word go Morzique spaceships fly into the screen from all directions and fire at you at an alarming rate. Luckily, you have three types of weapon at your disposal: standard fire, three smart bombs, and by holding down the fire- and smart bomb-keys simultaneously, a laser beam. Certain destroyed ships leave behind three types of power-ups: mint-coloured orbs add 10% energy to your energy bar, green orbs gain 100 points and red orbs gain 200 points. Finally, at the end of a level a huge end-of-level boss awaits and needs to be put to rest.
Did you ever puzzle a video? Just imagine a Backstreet Boys music video that has been cut into little square pieces. The individual squares have been scrambled, rotated or even mirrored. How quickly can you put the video back together? How well do you recognize the music clips with A.J., Brian, Howie D., Kevin and Nick? Test your puzzle and musical skills at the same time! If you succeed in solving the 12 clips on one level you're ready to tackle the 13th tricky video puzzle.
The compilation package consists of:
- Myth: The Fallen Lords
- Myth II: Soulblighter
- Myth II: Chimera
- Strategy guides for Myth I and Myth II and multiplayer maps.