Garou: Mark of the Wolves, known as Fatal Fury: Mark of the Wolves on U.S. Dreamcast, is a 1999 fighting game produced by SNK, originally for the Neo Geo system.
It is the ninth and final game in the Fatal Fury series, set ten years after the death of Geese Howard in Real Bout Fatal Fury. With the exception of Terry Bogard, the game is comprised of an entirely new cast of characters. Many of these characters reference older characters however.
MoHo is a Sega Dreamcast game developed by Lost Toys and published by Take 2 Interactive in 2000. It is notable for being the only exclusive Dreamcast game for the United Kingdom, despite receiving ratings from the German USK and French SELL ratings bodies and having its back cover description translated into German.
An American release under the name of Ball Breakers was planned for release in November 2000[5], but cancelled near completion; three different rips of a late prototype were leaked simultaneously in 2012.
Torb is the ultimate game of physics-based swordplay! Like a puppet, the character's every move is tied to springs, joints and wheels that you trigger in simple, familiar ways to produce true free-form combat. Blades clash, slide and behave like real world physical objects!
Multiplayer 2D platform versus game for 2-4 players inspired by Smash Bros and Towerfall, where jumpy kawaii gods fights in locations where the ground vibrates to the music. All of that because of that bard who sing stories about gods he doesn't know!