Get ready for a game that'll make you question all your life choices! Introducing "Dumb Ways to Climb" - the incredibly unimpressive creation that miraculously appeared in just one week! Watch in awe as our brilliant Bean aimlessly climbs on random stuff, reaching for the stars... well, kind of.
An unreleased port of Donkey Kong for the BBC Micro. Not much is known about this port, being documented by The Atarisoft FAQ (unofficial source) and a blog post from an ex-employee.
In 1984, Atari planned to release Mario Bros. for their Atari 8-bit computer line (400/800/XL/XE). This port was identical to the previously released Atari 5200 version of the game. For unknown reasons, the game was canceled despite being fully finished. Mario Bros. would eventually receive an Atari 8-bit release in 1988, but this port was completely different than the 1984 prototype.
"The syzygy is the alignment of the sun, moon and earth, which only occurs every 300 years. During that time, the gods are "mortal". They lose almost entirely that which makes them invincible, and a serious wound is capable of making them succumb... to death."
Super Mario FX is the rumored earliest version of Super Mario 64, originally developed for the Super Nintendo Entertainment System using the powerful Super FX chip, used in games such as Star Fox, F-ZERO and Yoshi's Island. Given that it would predate any known build of Super Mario 64, the elusive Super Mario FX should've been in development in around 1993.
While there is no concrete evidence of Super Mario FX's existence, Miyamoto has gone on saying that he thought about creating a three-dimensional Mario game during the development of Star Fox. This has led to the assumption that a Mario game using the Super FX chip could've been in the works for the Super Nintendo, before the existence of the Ultra 64.
Another point of misconception is that the internal codename for the Super FX chip while in development was Super Mario FX, and also printed on it can be found the characters MARIO, being an acronym of "Mathematical, Argonaut, Rotation, & Input/Output".
National Institutes of Health (NIH) experimenter Elisabeth Murray has spent the last 30 years cutting open monkeys’ skulls, suctioning out or burning portions of their brains to cause permanent damage, and locking them in cages, where she shows them large rubber snakes and spiders, terrifying them. These horrific experiments haven’t advanced human health at all, of course—they’ve only tormented and killed animals and wasted precious medical resources.
This cruelty is why 16-year-old Archit Kumar of Dublin, California, is on a mission to end speciesism, and he’s developed a video game called Monkey Fright to help accomplish that. The game brings awareness to the constant suffering and deprivation that these monkeys experience inside small, barren cages in windowless laboratories—day in and day out—where they’re denied companionship, sunshine, fresh air, exercise, and everything else they care about.
In Nightsong you play Linda Nightsong, a level 0 bard, with great fishing skills, and some magical knowledge. When a series of mysterious attacks strikes a riverside village, Linda and her friend Uzoma come to the rescue, and must save all the villagers before dark! To fend off the bewitched creatures, you must use the power of your magic tambourine to put the creatures to sleep and continue your quest.
This is a 30-minutes platform where you need to save all villagers before the time up. With several routes, you must carefully explore Anhuma village, using safe routes, avoiding traps, and avoiding creatures as much as possible, putting them to sleep.
Azumi and the Vertical Slice is a proof of concept for a 2D action platformer that attempts to bring modern indie speed and catharsis to the classic days of the Sega Mega Drive and Blast Processing. Fight through a wave of enemies and escape the room you're trapped in!
Fight through 70+ stages of retro action and strange internet culture, as you make it through Chungo's Gauntlet. There'll be many traps, strange enemies and strong bosses waiting for you.
Super Mario Unlimited Deluxe is a traditional-style Mario hack with difficulty ramping up from beginner to expert. It is based on the Super Mario Bros engine, but has been completely reworked into a whole new adventure.