The first of a series of eight Picross puzzle games distributed over the Nintendo Power cart-writing service. This part includes puzzles featuring characters from Pokémon Red and Blue.
Blue's ABC Time Activities takes Blue's Clues, the Emmy-nominated #1 preschool TV series, to a whole new interactive level of playful learning.
Blue and her friends help preschoolers strengthen essential pre-reading skills as they explore the world of letters, sounds and words in this activity pack featuring multi-level learning activities. Kids identify letters, build vocabulary, practice phonics and create rhymes as they collect words to help Blue build silly stores in her Word Book.
Print Blue's Word Book and other activities to share with family and friends. Difficulty levels automatically adjust to meet each child's skill level.
KLAX - It's simple in concept and easy to play. Catch the colored tiles with the paddle and flip them into bins to make same colored stacks, diagonals and rows of three. Sounds easy? It is. The hard part is pulling yourself away from this fun and addictive game!
Get ready to come and play and learn in SESAME STREET: Elmo's 123s for the Game Boy Color. Preschoolers love Elmo it's a simple fact of life and your kids or siblings will have a fun time here while they learn their numbers. There are four basic math concepts to be enjoyed: addition, subtraction, counting, and number pattern recognition. Elmo is the official welcoming committee to visitors from the Planet Zap, and he needs help counting all the stars so his visiting outerspace pals will turn the Sesame Street lights back on. Four cheerful and challenging games await: "How Many Stars," "Beam That Number," "Adding Countdown," and "Take It Away." In "Stars." you'll count how many stars that a speeding spaceship has left in its wake; "Beam" has you beam a spotlight over three patterns. Correctly match the patterns to the number in the lower right hand of the screen and watch rockets blast into space. "Countdown" has you flying with your jetpack and solving three addition equations, and "Take It Away" is similar, only l
Sesame Street: Elmo's ABCs is based on the 1980s computer game Letter-Go-Round. Instead of Sesame Street characters, such as Big Bird, Elmo finds a letter that goes merry-go-round to saying how the letters were. They solve by checking the controls to determine the letter.
Based on the basic concepts of "simple and easy to play", "deep and addictive", and "very exhilarating when the mystery is solved" - includes 3 types of puzzle games.
Released in Disc Station Vol 22, Hasamuncho is a marble puzzle game. Players aim to capture the most marbles, with special powers being available to assist them.
This game was released only in Japan. It is the fourth game in the Puyo Puyo series and the last set during the Madou-era in the main series.
Continuing the trend of naming the games after puns, the name comes from a pun on "yon", the Japanese word for the number 4, but this time this is the only reference to the pun.
The gameplay in is similar to that of Puyo Puyo 2, but adds super attacks. Clearing chains now builds up a "charge meter" which allows players to use them. The only other addition was a new game mode which could be played with a number of different field sizes, smaller or bigger than the standard 6x12, however, it removes several game modes that were present in Puyo Puyo Sun, i.e. the tournament, task and chain training modes. The art is also vastly different to the previous game in the series and, of course, the Fever series; this style was only otherwise used for Minna de Puyo Puyo.
STORY:
Satan has released an odd demon called Pierott. Pierott invites Arle and Carbuncle over to the “Puyo Puyo C
Based on the basic concepts of "simple and easy to play", "deep and addictive", and "very exhilarating when the mystery is solved" - includes 3 types of puzzle games.
Magical Drop III was ported twice to the Sony PlayStation. The first PlayStation port, Magical Drop III: Yokubari Tokudaigou!, and features a mode that attempts to play similar to the arcade version alongside the Saturn's "special" rebalanced mode.
Despite the "arcade" version visually mimicking the Neo Geo AES version (down to emulating the starting menu), there are several gameplay and graphical quirks that suggest that it is an adjusted version of the "special" mode rather than a direct port.
The choice between Arcade and Special mode is given to the player immediately upon booting the game, and the system must be reset to switch.