Bass Rise is a hyper-realistic fishing game featuring:
Twelve levels and up to four players!
Underwater views for maximum play!
Customized fishing trips!
Three different types of fish!
Adjustable reel speed and three line weights!
Hundreds of Megabass lures!
Compatibility with DUAL SHOCK analog controller!
Hidden lures and lakes!
In 1980, Nichibutsu released Crazy Climber, in which players control a man attempting to scale a series of buildings using only his hands and feet, while avoiding a series of falling objects, mostly thrown by the building's tenants. Crazy Climber 2000 takes the game play of the original and gives it a sweeping graphical makeover.
The object is again to scale buildings while avoiding the falling objects thrown at you by its tenants, as well as windows that close on your fingers. The buildings themselves are laid out differently In the first stages, for example, the buildings start out as square skyscrapers. Later levels, however, require you to scale round ones. As well as this, new threats are introduced, such as:
- Circling vultures that throw eggs at you.
- Gorillas reaching out to grab you on both sides of the building.
- Window cleaners that go from left to right, making you fall if you get in their way
- Boulders thrown from elevators
CC2000 also allows you to move from one face of the building to another.
The developers of Bubble Bobble Nostalgia also released an add-on called Christmas Edition.
In fact, this is the same Bubble Bobble Nostalgia, only with the atmosphere of the New Year or Christmas holidays: the title music is the notorious Jingle Bells, the dragons are dressed up in the costume of Santa Claus or Santa Claus, and the passwords are replaced with the names of attributes of the New Year or the same Christmas. Well, they changed the background and platforms in some levels. And the rest is the same.
A remake of the famous Japanese game about dragons releasing green bubbles, developed by Russian programmers and released by the notorious Alawar Entertainment studio. Yes, yes, the same one that created and released the well-known Farm Frenzy and the Treasures of Montezuma.
The gameplay is simple. We control a green dragon (and in the game mode for two - also blue), which shoots green bubbles at enemies, and as soon as the enemies hit them, they immediately find themselves in a trap, and we calmly pop these bubbles as a dragon. And from the enemies we get their leftovers in the form of various kinds of food: from fruits to a mug of beer, which also appear as a randomly appearing bonus. There are only 8 enemies - these are clockwork toys familiar to us from the original, and weirdos in a white cloak, and brown ghosts similar to octopuses, and flying monsters with a propeller, and jumpers, and fluffy monsters, and sorcerers, and spiders. If clockwork toys, propeller monsters and octopuses are not particularly dange
Pacific Warriors is a WWII air combat simulation where the player takes control of an American fighter in the Pacific campaign. Power-ups and special weapons will be at the player's disposal as enemies become more difficult as the game progresses.
Enemy Star is a Lander-style game, where the player is a bomb defusal pilot, blasting away through heavily defended underground caverns, past wind tunnels, fire walls and subterranean lakes. There are 27 missions across 5 different worlds.
Feast on fun in this fast-paced feeding frenzy. Terk and Tantor are hungry and have invited all of their animal friends over for a jungle feast. Devour all the food before Kerchak and Sabor spoil the party.
A rip-roaring romp through the jungle. Use speed, skill and strategy to help Tarzan navigate three devious obstacle courses while avoiding his enemies.
Fly your spaceship around on the level and shoot at everything that shoots at you. There are refueling zones where ailing ships can replenish their shields and weapons and safe zones that offer a respite from the action, but there's little time to think about anything other than your immediate survival.