A handheld game licensed by The Tetris Company and produced by Hasbro, this game features two LCD screens, with the smaller one on the shorter end and the wider one going around the body of the main unit. Game-play consists of the player twisting the shorter end to position the piece projected on the smaller screen above the gap in the pieces shown on the larger, twisting the smaller screen itself to rotate the piece itself in one direction or another, then squeezing both ends together to "drop" the piece in place.
On Marathon Mode the player is given three lives, and the time allotted the player to maneuver, rotate and drop the piece gets shorter as the game progresses. Should the player either fail to drop the piece in time, or they drop said piece in a way that any part of the piece would stick out of the top of the lower LCD screen, the player loses a life.
Barbie and Skipper team up for a fun game of two-player Beach Volleyball against Midge and Teresa. Control Skipper and Barbie and decide if you want to pass, set or spike the ball. First team to 15 points wins the game!
POP Station is a Brick Game variant with the casing imitating a PlayStation Portable. It is a bootleg version of the already bootleg handheld Pop Station, which uses an LCD screen but isn't Brick Game-based.
JUST LIKE THE ORIGINAL - Feel nostalgic and retro while playing the most fun football handheld game of all time!
CLASSIC GAMEPLAY - Run, kick and move forward or sideways to avoid tacklers while playing by yourself or against someone else!
SHARE - Perfect for fans or collectors looking to share this classic with the new generation!
Football 2 (or II) was released in 1978. It is the Sequel to the popular Football I game. It adds the functionality of running forward and backward, passing, etc (and actually has a 10 yard playing field, not 9 like Football I). This game also has an 'Easter Egg' of sorts, if you hold down the 'Pass' button while turning on the game, you effectively get Pro 3 or Pro 4 difficulty settings for the game play (i.e., if you have the switch on Pro 1, holding down the pass will give you Pro 3, etc. Pro 4 is VERY fast and difficult to play.)
Football was released in 1977. It was labelled either Football or Football I (after the release of Football II). Early models of Football had an AC Adapter jack which was removed on later models (which would only run on batteries).
First released in June of 1977 as the second game released by Mattel (Auto Race was the first) and sold through Sears. After less than 100,000 were made, Sears (using a computer model based on initial sales figures) determined that the games would not be big sellers, and most of the production for Football and Auto Race was stopped. Within 6 months, it became obvious to Sears that their prediction was wrong, and production was started up again and reached previously unknown levels! (Reaching as many as 500,000 units a week by mid-February, 1978).
Released it as a pack-in for a version of the console released after the first revision. Unfortunately, it seems the cartridge was not released separately. This package came with both a game cartridge (dark blue) and a manga/design cartridge (light blue) for additional stamps. The game consists of a simple battle feature where you pick a character, draw a weapon for them, and battle various Rockman X3 villains in RPG-like battles.