A videogame "sequel" to George Orwell's speculative novel "1984". 1994 consists of basic platforming gameplay and chronologically takes place ten years after the events of the book.
You have to collect pieces of an amulet. Whenever you pick up a piece it's replaced with an arrow which can only be trespassed in that direction, thus creating a maze.
Released in 1984, Mobile Suit Gundam: Last Shooting is the first game to be based on the Mobile Suit Gundam franchise.
In the first level you have to dodge falling debris. If you've dodged enough debris the door of your Mobile Suit will open. Enter your Mobile Suit to proceed to the next level. In the second level you, as a pilot in your own Mobile Suit, have to shoot enemy battle mechs and gun emplacements.
FlightSim I puts the player inside the cockpit, behind the controls of a high performance jet. This game is in the conception of the Flight Simulator computer game series but for the TRS-80 Color Computer.
The simulation environment consists of approximately 22,185 square miles and recreates most of the conditions normally encountered in actual flight. The player can fly the jet to any of eight airports or nine landmarks scattered throughout the simulation area.
Action racing game created by TechnoSoft and released in 1984, initially for the PC-88 and then other Japanese computer platforms. It was the first home video game with 3D polygon graphics.
This extremely rare game was sold in the U.S. state New Jersey by Personal Games Company. The company marketed it as a great birthday gift. About ten copies of the game were sold. The cartridge was sold with a three folded manual sheet.
The cartridge has a red label with blue balloons on it and an empty space to write your name on. Each game is personalized to the boy or girl celebrating his or her birthday. When the game loads up it shows his or her name on the opening screen. The basic object of this game is to blow out candles as they fall toward you.