It's eat or be eaten in this classic maze game. Your object is to clear the dots from each level while avoiding the nasty Gobl-ems! Eat the power pills to turn the tables on your foes for a short time while collecting the bonus fruits and prizes.
Based on CHAMP Pacman, this version offers superb graphics, Soundblaster support and enhanced gameplay that truly makes you feel like you're in an arcade! A completely re-designed user interface is now easier and more powerful than before. A complete remake of the look and feel has created a truly enjoyable game.
CHAMP Pac-em comes with all the classic levels and intermissions, plus more power-ups in CHAMP mode, including more ghosts, speed patches, transporters, and invisible mazes!
Home Alone for the Sega Master System is a game based on the 1990 Home Alone film. It is a different (but similar) game to the Mega Drive and Game Gear versions - the Master System version was developed by Probe and only released in Europe. It is also considered to be the slightly better game.
Sneak and Snatch is an action game developed by Nintendo and published by Wizards of the Coast for the Game Boy Advance E-Reader.
Sneak and Snatch is playable by scanning five specific cards from the physical Pokémon TCG Aquapolis set. The five cards required for scanning are:
Sudowoodo
Weepinbell
Bellsprout
Pinsir
Scyther
As in the original Pac-Man arcade game, the basic objective of each level is to guide Pac-Man through a maze while eating dots, unique food items, and power pellets that make Pac-Man's enemies, the Ghosts, edible for a limited time. The ability to jump returns from Pac-Mania for bypassing hazards and avoiding enemies. Some levels contain obstacles such as deadly boulders, animals who delay or kill Pac-Man, and explosive projectiles. After every few rounds there is a bonus mini-game in which the player can obtain some extra points (with every 50,000 points earning Pac-Man an extra life). The levels also feature a variety of shapes and architectural features such as cylindrical mazes, canopies, bridges, pyramids, and even walls that allow Pac-Man to walk vertically. The game features more sophisticated events than its arcade predecessor, such as collecting a certain number of pellets to unlock another area of a maze. The game also includes the ability to see the short intermission videos that come before a new level
J-Bird is a Q*Bert clone featuring nearly identical mechanics and enemies, except with a delightful (yet equally foul-mouthed) wingless bird taking the place of the ugly Q*Bert
Play as Ooe Rumiko, bored and hungry secretary, in this arcade-style game from Japan. Ooe must navigate through eight different office levels, propelling herself in her rolling office chair, and we all now how much fun rolling about in those chairs is!
Hi-Ten Bomberman is a special HD version of Bomberman brought out on a brief promotional tour in 1993. It is said to be the first HD video game ever made.
This game is an upgrade of the original 1988 arcade release of Gain Ground, being presented entirely in 3D.
It is mostly accurate to the arcade version, however adjusts some stages to better suit the aspect ratio and has an optional bugfix on stage 4-8. Also it only supports a maximum of two players, as opposed to the arcade's three. There is an extra mode unlocked after beating the game once, where graphics are altered, statistics are changed and a new soundtrack comes into play.
This is a German C64 game. Your mission is to hunt and kill teachers. While being banned in Germany it was still very popular among German teens in the 80s.
Bomberman, which continues to attract many fans with its simple gameplay, has finally become a network battle!
Moreover, it is possible to play up to 8 players this time!
If you connect to the net, you can have a heated battle not only with your usual friends but also with many rivals on the other side of the net!
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.
Distributed freely to students, Surf 'm Up is a little Kaboom!-inspired game by Dutch beer brewer Dommelsch.
The premise is simple: four cranes of a beer tender are spilling droplets and you, an empty beer glass, must collect each droplet. Controlled by keyboard or mouse, the game is a test of reflexes. Each collected droplet gives 5 points; 45 points will get you to the next section; after three sections you will progress to the next increasingly harder level.
Missing too many droplets will cause the beer glass to slip. Watch out for falling sugar cubes, peanuts, matchsticks and darts - you can only withstand them three times. Also beware of a little green caterpillar who tries to hinder your progress in all manners possible. Help comes in the form of a bell announcing 'happy hour'-mode - making your beer glass invulnerable for a couple of seconds. Another help is a sponge appearing from time to time. Jumping on it cleans all spilled droplets.
Users were encouraged to save their highscores on a blank disk and
Pokémon Battrio is an arcade video game that was announced on April 11, 2007 and released on November 21, 2007 in Japan. The video game requires players to move certain tazos with Pokémon on a grid. The video game is made for two-player multiplayer, where players will fight against other Pokémon. Each player can use up to three Pokémon. It is the first heavily edited Pokémon title for arcades.
This video game was not released internationally outside of Japan. Due to its popularity, a new version called Battrio: V was made, which, as its name says, contains Pokémon of the fifth generation.