Build your bridge with love. Be proud of your creation, and give it a pompous name. Then eventually watch it with horror collapsing as a train runs of it, giving you an undeniable proof that your bridge was indeed flawed. Then start over.
These few sentences depict well a typical game of Pontifex, the successor of the infamous freeware Bridge Builder which had already made crazy numerous players around the world when it was released.
As its name suggests, this game is all about building bridges. Each level confronts you with the same challenge: there is a river to cross, and it's up to you to devise the bridge. Three materials are available - light steel, heavy steel and wire - each with own strength, weight and price. In order to clear a level, your bridge must be able to withstand successfully the weight of a train running on it. Hopefully, you can try an unlimited number of times...
The game actually features a very advanced physics model, taking into account compression and stretching - and of course gravity
The types of hamsters that can be raised have increased to eight types: Golden, Jungarian, Roborovski, Blue Sapphire, White, Black, Panda, and Pudding! In addition, it has become possible to keep two hamsters at the same time. When you feed them, you can see cute gestures that the two animals share and eat. You can marry your own hamsters or play with your friend's hamsters using the communication function. The contents of the mini-game have been renewed, new walking places have been added, 16 new types of hamsters can be discovered, and you can meet the discovered hamsters at "Maison de Hamster".
Is a Sega Dreamcast game. It is built to use the Dreamcast Keyboard.
The game is a dating simulation but in order to progress the player has to type in certain words within specific time frames. Not only the concept but also the name of the game are referencing The Typing of the Dead.
Densha de Go! Shinkansen: Sanyoushinkansen-hen (loosely translated to "Go by Train! Shinkansen: Sanyou Shinkansen Edition") is an electric train driving simulation game developed and published by Taito for the PlayStation 2 in Japan on September 20, 2001. It was later ported to the PC by Unbalance on December 13, 2002.
A spin-off of the Densha de Go! series, Shinkansen focuses on the titular high-speed rail line San'yō Shinkansen (through the entire route both ways, between Shin-Ōsaka and Hakata).
The game was later ported to the Wii as Densha de Go! Shinkansen EX: Sanyoushinkansen-hen (loosely translated to "Go by Train! Shinkansen EX: Sanyou Shinkansen Edition") on March 1, 2007. This version features a new "Kids Mode" utilizing the Wii Remote's motion control.
Mobile Suit Gundam: Journey to Jaburo is an action game based directly on the Mobile Suit Gundam films and series. The game begins at the start of the series and ends at the ending of the second film. The game plays in an action game format with a standard third person view. It features newly hand animated cutscenes that depict events from the original television series as well as a CGI opening depicting a space battle from the One Year War and then a scene of the Gundam destroying several Zaku IIs before being attacked by Char Aznable. It is also the prequel to Mobile Suit Gundam: Encounters in Space.
The English dub of the video game features the voices of the actors who were cast for the Mobile Suit Gundam television series as with most games subsequent to the series' dubbing, rather than the English cast of the films.
Journey to Jaburo takes place during the One Year War, and depicts the crew of the White Base making their way from the Side 7 sector of space colonies to the Federation headquarters at Jabu
Get ready for fun, excitement and non-stop laughs with Bob the Builder and his Team on the PlayStation game console. Join Bob in 8 Fix it Fun activities that include Bubble Trouble, Where's Prichard, Hedgehog Rescue, and Wendy's Birthday. With varied difficulty levels, Bob the Builder voices, music, and characters from the TV show, kids of all ages will be saying, Can we fix it, yes we can!
Zoo Tycoon is a business simulation developed by Blue Fang Games and released by Microsoft Game Studios. It is a tycoon game in which the player must run a zoo and try to make a profit. Although first released for Microsoft Windows and Macintosh in 2001, it was ported to the Nintendo DS in 2005. It was followed by two expansion packs, Zoo Tycoon: Dinosaur Digs and Zoo Tycoon: Marine Mania, which were released in 2002, as well as a sequel, Zoo Tycoon 2, released in 2004.
Software Tycoon puts you in the role of a game studio CEO. You start out in the 1980s, where you hire your first employees and develop your first games and research new technologies and genres to create even better games.
Besides a free-style mode without any goal, the game does feature various scenarios.
A spiritual successor to the game was released under the name of Mad Games Tycoon by two of the main developers of the original game: Stefan and Christian Pohl.
A promotional tie-in game in which the player takes the role of a McDonald's restaurant worker, preparing food and working the cash register in a collection of mini-games.
Microsoft Train Simulator (abbreviated to MSTS) is a train simulator for Microsoft Windows, released in July 2001 and developed by UK-based Kuju Entertainment.
Your mission is to save helpless people from crime and disaster in a city in turmoil. Three action packed game modes let you pilot one of five rescue choppers through a modern city in crisis, performing daring roof top rescues, extinguishing high-rise infernos and apprehending fugitives on the run.
A turbulent city is under siege from disasters, and the only way to save the day is to get in from the air. So set those rotors spinning and take off to take on City Crisis. As a skilled chopper pilot, you'll fly one of three real-life rescue and pursuit helicopters through a bustling city, zigzagging through high-rise buildings and weaving around dangerous electrical wires. Missions will have you saving citizens from the rooftops from certain death in Rescue mode, performing daring rooftop cable jumps to nab citizens and their pets from natural disasters. Then combat towering infernos from the air with water cannons and fire-extinguishing missiles, always on the yoke to keep control against unexpected updrafts and sudd
Chao Adventure is a mini-game that can be played on the VMU in Sonic Adventure 2 for the Dreamcast. This game is designed to train the player's Chao to become faster and stronger, and it appears when the player transfers a Chao from the Chao Garden in Sonic Adventure 2 to the VMU using the Chao Transporter.
Dinosaur World is a freeware BBC title published in 2001 based on the Walking with Dinosaurs series, In the game the player looks at and learn about pre-historic dinosaurs and plants.
i Modo Mo Issho (iモードもいっしょ) is a video game developed by Bomber Express and published by Sony Computer Entertainment Inc. It was released on May 24, 2001 for the PlayStation, and it is the third game and an expansion pack for Doko Demo Issyo and Koneko Mo Issho in the Doko Demo Issyo Series.
Like Koneko Mo Issho, save data for Doko Demo Issyo is required to play it. It features additional content, such as new environments and music.
It's most notable feature is its connection with the i-Mode phone service, a Japanese mobile phone service provided by DoCoMo that allowed an early form of Internet connectivity with mobile phones. Players can use an adapter to connect the phone to the Playstation console and connect to the online service, which allows players to to communicate to other players and the Pokepi, similar to the PocketStation.
It is also the last Doko Demo Issyo game to be released exclusively on the PlayStation. The online service ended on December 15th, 2002, but the offline features of