Before being cancelled, a version of Metal Gear Solid was in development for the ill-fated Game.com, a portable console released by Tiger Electronics in 1997. It seems that the game was going to be a port of Metal Gear Solid PSX.
A port of Frogger for the Game.com.
The Frogger version for Game.com features two variations within the cartridge. The first version mirrors the original arcade game, where the objective is to guide five frogs, one at a time, across a bustling street and a river to reach their designated homes safely. The second version is an enhanced edition, incorporating newer levels. Some levels consist of only two segments of river or road, while others present a single extensive stretch of road without a designated safe zone in the centre. Additionally, Game.com allows up to four players to participate, taking turns during gameplay.
Duke Nukem 3D for the Tiger Game.com is a handheld first-person shooter inspired by the PC version, though it is profoundly different from the original.
It plays more like a dungeon crawler rather than an FPS due to Game.Com's hardware limitations. The player can only move Duke forward, backwards, strafe left or right, one screen at a time. By pressing B or C the player can turn Duke to shoot left or right, but can't turn him to face that direction and move.
The Game.Com edition of Resident Evil 2 follows much the same structure and story of its console counterpart. This version has the player control Leon by positioning him in the direction he needs to go and by having him move forward whilst engaging zombies. Leon can only be moved over three horizontal planes as in a 2D game with a side view, but with a pseudo 3D effect. Each non-scrolling location holds different zombies and once they are dead Leon moves to a new screen. He has access to an inventory to cycle between weapons. There is support for options such as touchscreen inventory menus, in addition to the game keeping track of the time the player has spent with the game.