Based on the hit television show, "Riskant!" (which itself is based on "Jeopardy!") for Commodore 64 and Amiga features support for three players. Before starting, you can enter the number of participants, their names, gender and appearance.
Gameplay consists of selecting a category and money value with number keys. After the "answer" appears, you have 7 seconds to buzz in. Answering involves selecting the start of the question ("Who is/was ...", "What is/was ..." etc.) and completing the question with the right answer in 30 seconds.
After the first two rounds, players with positive dollar amounts can play in Riskant! Finale. The player with the most money at the end of this round wins the game.
The object of 123-Talk is to talk to your child, to help teach them how to say numbers, counting, addition, subtraction, and interact with a computer. For children ages 1-4, 123-Talk will teach your child to say the the numbers 1 through 10 and how to find numbers on the keyboard. They will also learn how to sing the 123 song and how to draw with Easy Draw II.
The registered version of this game lets you play with the latest version and also include new features.
Amanda Stories was the one of the very first "point-and-click" programs for kids. Not only is there a strong narrative--in ten separate stories Inigo explores his house, his dream, the outside world, and Your Faithful Camel ventures as far afield as the North Pole--but where you click actually determines the course of the story. As children (ages 3 and up) move intuitively through one adventure after another, the combination of color animations, great sound effects, original music, and a variety of endings challenges and delights them.
Introducing a whole new world of fun!
Now, you can enhance your child's creative potential with the new Barbie PC Fashion Design & Color! It's an explosion of fashion, color, and fun!
This menu-driven software program lets your child select, then color Barbie fashions. Thousands of combinations to choose from for hours of fun. Available for IBM or IBM-compatible PCs in 3½ inch and 5¼ inch Disk versions.
Puzzle Boy is a port of the Game Boy title Kwirk, but features more and different levels along with changed graphics. In contrast to the original version, the perspective is straight top-down and there is no undo-function.
An interactive game, developed by Synergy Inc. It features three modes: The Anthrax Robot Works and The Anthrax Robot Works (Funny Fish MIX) are interactive music pieces, while Shangri-La is a point-and-click adventure.
Based on the hit television show, Jeopardy! for Game Boy features over 1,500 questions and support for two players. Before starting, you can enter the number of participants and their names. Gameplay consists of moving a cursor and selecting a category and money value. After the question (or answer) appears, you have ten seconds to buzz in. Answering involves selecting each letter on an alphabet display to spell out one or more words. After the first two rounds, players with positive dollar amounts can play in Final Jeopardy! The player with the most money at the end of this round wins the game. For two-player games, you can either link two systems together or share one Game Boy.
AV Pachinko also known as AV Super Real Pachinko is an adult-originated pachinko simulation game developed by C&E and published by Hacker International in 1991.
Ribbit! (リビット!) is an arcade game developed and published by Sega for Sega System C hardware. It's similar in nature to Frogger, in that the user controls a frog, capable of moving in four directions. Your task is to eat all the small bugs while avoiding bigger ones.
The DOS port of this game is mostly the same graphically compared to the original Amiga release, though there are some slight color changes (most notably in the UI which has changed from organe to yellow). The original AdLib (and by extension, Tandy 3-Voice) tracks are generally longer than the Amiga arrangement, and they play in a slightly different order. The track "The smiling blues" plays before "Much joviality" and "Not at all serious". This game was released as a stand-alone expansion or an add-on, and could picked up either as a 3.5" or 5.25" floppy disk.
A.G.E. is a follow-up to Galactic Empire. Like its predecessor, it is a first-person space exploration game rendered in 3D. As you pilot your spacecraft around the planets and stars, engaging in space combat and conversation with other characters, you unravel the Conquer the Universe plot. The game is similar to Elite in that you are relatively free to travel to wherever you please.
The MS-DOS version has a bit of a different intro due to graphical differences, different sounds, and some parts of the main HUD for your spacecraft have different colors. You can also select what mode the game will run in at the beginning at start-up.