As each player drives around the game area they leave a solid trail behind them. The object of the game is to cause other players to crash into one of these trails, one of the moving barriers, or the edge of the game area. The first player to win the required number of rounds wins the game, the default winning score is fifteen but this can be altered.
An optional feature of this game is the use of missiles which can punch holes in the trails. There are four kinds of missiles available in the game, which the player picks them up by running into them, however each player can only carry one missile at a time.
The first release in this tennis series allows players to compete in a World Tour of 90 events against 250 players. Single matches can be dirty up and dirty down (two against one) as well as the more conventional singles and doubles. Grass, clay, flexi and cement courts are featured. Action replays can be viewed in slow motion, fast speed, and rewound.
Players can be defined as volleyers, defenders, punchers or varied, with definable kit colours and playing abilities. As you play the game, your player's ability improves, resulting in faster and more accurate serves as well as faster running and bigger jumps.
Tennis Elbow 2004 is an enhanced Windows port of the original Tennis Elbow.
The Cassandra Galleries is a puzzle-based adventure game, rather like the 7th Guest. You’ve been invited to explore a mysterious museum. Cassandra, the owner of the museum, has disappeared with his daughter. You must find out what's happened to them.
I Can Be a Dinosaur Finder is an educational game developed by Cloud Nine Entertainment and published by Macmillan Digital Publishing USA in 1997.
Join Addie the kangaroo, Katie the chameleon and Rufus the dog as they help paleontologist Dr. Rock Hound dig up fossils and piece together dinosaur skeletons. Take a dino-digging break with games involving jigsaws, matching pairs, painting, and feeding hungry prehistoric creatures.
When Pooh floats down to land in the Hundred Acre Wood in Disney's Ready for Math With Pooh, he comes to earth in what will become a garden as the game progresses. The player signs in on a wheelbarrow and chooses a path from the three directions given - in each of these places he'll meet Pooh's friends; Piglet, Owl, Tigger, Eeyore, Roo, and Pooh himself, and play games designed to exercise his math skills at one of three levels.
Gameplay is identical to that of the sister game Disney's Ready to Read with Pooh: pointing and clicking the mouse will perform actions, the cursor is a little bumblebee that flutters it's wings whenever it is over a hotspot, and when dragging an object is necessary the game utilizes click-and-stick.
In 1997 Anstoss 2 was published. It was convincing with its wit, complexity, 2D scene mode and text mode. Good sales figures and good ratings (e.g. GameStar 83%) confirm this.
The menu navigation of the game changed completely. Now there was a bar in the lower part of the screen, which led the player through the individual screens.
Anstoss 2 specialized again completely in the job of the club manager. The developers took some of the weaknesses from Anstoss 1 and improved them. The opportunity to train in the 2nd Bundesliga and the then regional league (north, north-east, south, south-west) and in other countries (England, France, Italy, Spain) was particularly well received. In addition, the game was now playable indefinitely, which was very popular with the players. There was also a new game mode: "real managerial career". While in the soccer managers the player always had to choose his team himself before, when choosing this game mode, some rather weaker teams were thrown out with which the player could negotia
The sequel to La luz del druida serves as a closure to the Leyendas de Lhodrye short series (only two games).
This time the action takes place in some far away lands in the Elidon kingdom. Our hero must find "The Ancient One" so he can find a solution to the dark prophecies that threaten his land.
The gameplay is the same as the first game. You control your character through your keyboard in a platform-like environment solving puzzles.
GT style racing features in this racer, which tends more towards arcade than simulation. Cars include the Predator and the Hurricane, each with their own strengths and weaknesses. The action can be viewed from inside or outside the car.
When starting the game for the first time you can take part in a training or start in a championship. The practice will be done on one of the two initially available tracks. The other tracks are closed. To gain access to those tracks you must first complete one of the championships. Championships consists of a number of races in different countries, taking in road and asphalt settings.
Monkey Shines is a platform game for the Apple Macintosh that was created and published as shareware by FantaSoft, LLC in 1997. In the game, a monkey named Bonzo explores various stages, gathering fruits and keys. Monkey Shines was named the most nostalgic game of the year by MacUser magazine in 1997. Later, a Microsoft Windows-compatible version of the game was created.
A free mission pack for Outlaws that was made available both online and on free promotional discs.
Outlaws: Handful of Missions is a pistol-packin' collection of four single and five multiplayer missions and requires a retail version of Outlaws.
It is set in a time period years before the original game. A young James Anderson is serving as a government agent and receives assignments from the attorney general.
The single-player missions in which he has to capture gang leaders, are set in a Missouri wharf town, a Spanish villa, and some icy caves in the Rocky Mountains. The other mission features infiltration behind enemy lines during the Civil War. Multiplayer levels are set in towns with a great number of places to hide.
The first officially licensed Champions League game released on PC in 1997. The game featured motion captured players and was developed by Krisalis Software. A PS1 version was developed but never released...
FIFA Soccer Manager is EA's first venture into the market of football managers. With a line-up of twelve leagues in five different countries (England with four divisions and Germany, Italy, France and Scotland with two). The calendar follows realistically how the competitions develop, so expect a Winter break in Germany, a September league start in Italy and many weeks with double fixtures in France. The database, composed by over 7500 players, also includes some European sides, and the three European competitions are present.