Based on the TV quiz show of the same name. This CD game features full motion video sprites of the host, Alex Trebek, and the contestants as well as digital track of the theme song and the host's voice.
You can play in a multiplayer game or against the computer and can select the number of contestants and the gender and appearance of your own contestant.
There is a larger database of questions than any of the cartridge versions due to the increased capacity of the CD media versus cartridge media of the time.
Numberball is a 1-player educational math game for the Apple II.
The player tries to solve mathematical equations by shooting balls into an equation via a series of tubes and switches. An equation is shown on the bottom of the screen, and a ball with a number appears in a slot. The player can choose to shoot or discard the number. The player must align the tubes so the number arrives in the correct location to solve the equation.
The Sega Mega-CD version of Wheel of Fortune was handled by rightsholders Sony themselves through Sony Imagesoft and Absolute Entertainment rather than through GameTek, in a similar fashion to their other game show Mega-CD game, Jeopardy!.
As with Jeopardy!, this game is a flashier production, featuring animated videos, animated sprites, and voice samples of Vanna White (sans Pat Sajak again) and the model contestants and a full spinning Wheel, but also cuts back in other places (most noticeably, Vanna isn't animated as turning letters at all; she merely walks by and the letters turn themselves).
Trivial Pursuit: Interactive Multimedia Game is a version of the board game Trivial Pursuit for the Sega Mega-CD. It was only released in North America.
Board game adaptation of the long-running monster-raising video and table-top game franchise that plays similarly to Dokapon Kingdom. It was created by Sofel in 1994.
America Oudan Ultra Quiz is based on the Japanese TV show of the game name. Like the original show, the game focuses on trivia questions solely related to the United States of America. Areas of knowledge include history, geography, culture, literature, sports, language, and others. The main quiz show takes place in New York and involves questions in random categories. A special travel mode allows the player to visit various locations in the USA, including notable airports, beaches, sports stadiums, and other popular travel destinations.
Dangerous Creatures allows the user to investigate animals according to several categories: Atlas (animals by country), Weapons (animals that had teeth, venom, or claws), Guides (related animals), Habitats (animals from a given environment), and Index (an alphabetical list of all animals covered). Animal articles have pictures, descriptions, and video clips. In addition a user can be tested with quizzes on the animals.
TV Colosso was a brazilian children TV Show from Rede Globo from 1993 to 1997. Editora Abril, in 1994, released a collection of illustrated books with this educative multimedia game as a gift.
Travel the world with characters Priscila or Gilmar answering questions about the places you visit. Go for the best score!
Family Feud Deluxe Edition for the 3DO system brings you over 4,000 new survey questions taken right from the hit television show. Play alone or with up to nine friends. Full motion video families battle against each other in the fully rendered Family Feud studio. After the host's digitized voice reads the answer, ring in to guess the top survey responses from people across the country.
Pole Chudes: Capital Show is a fan-made recreation of the TV-show of the same name (the Russian version of Wheel of Fortune).
There are up to three players at one time, two controlled by a human and one by AI (characters from famous USSR cartoons). They have to guess the word by one letter or completely (without error) in turns, rolling the wheel with special symbols on it, which decide the sum of money rewarded for a right answer or its multiplier, skip turn, burn all the money, open any letter and a super prize (when chosen, the player should leave the game). As a part of the joke, all prizes are useless, like a toothpick or lace, but they are left with the address to pick them up.