Welcome to the Jimmy Connors Invitational. Prepare to hold court with the ripest top-seeds in championships singles and doubles tournament play. Survive... and Jimmy will be waiting to give you the tennis lesson of your life!
The fun is just beginning in this explosive pack of games and tools for your Lynx! Enjoy the arcade action of ChopperX or Parafly, or kick back and relax with Password, High Roller or Blackjack. Looking for something really different? Give Sketch or Soundtool a whirl! No matter how you slice it, no Lynx fan will be disappointed with MegaPak 1.
Remnant features a pseudo-3D environment and plenty of space-faring combat to keep you on your toes. In this arcade extravaganza, you fight off endless waves of invaders. Try to survive multiple foes at once, meteor showers, and more!
Ishido: The Way of Stones is a puzzle video game released in 1990 by Accolade and developed by Publishing International.
Ishido is a puzzle board game consisting of a set of 72 stones and a game board of 96 squares. The primary objective of Ishido is to place all 72 stones onto the board of 96 squares. The challenge arises because stones must be placed adjacent to others that they match, either by color or symbol. When the board begins to fill up, this objective is not so easily accomplished.
In your super-advanced speedboat, you must deliver top-secret military equipment to various parts of the world. Fame and riches await you -- but so do pitfalls and danger!
Paperboy is an arcade action game developed and published by Atari Games and Midway Games, and released in 1985. The player takes the role of a paperboy who delivers a fictional newspaper called The Daily Sun along a suburban street on his bicycle. The arcade version of the game featured bike handlebars as the controller.
The game was ported to many home systems beginning in 1986. A sequel for home computers and consoles, Paperboy 2, was released in 1991.
Welcome to the futuristic sport of ‘Hyperdrome’ - hop into your gridpod and blast off into the arena. Capture precious jewels and equipment and attempt to score points by depositing them in your own goal. Obtain power ups to blast the enemy and steal possession of vital energy. Comlynx with up to three of your friends and play against each other in this hyper-speed futuristic sport.
Batman Returns is a 1992 side-scrolling action-beat 'em up video game developed and published by Atari Corporation in North America and Europe for the Atari Lynx. Based on the DC Comics superhero Batman, it is inspired by the Warner Bros.'s 1992 film of the same name.
The player controls the helicopter from an overhead, isometric perspective. The Apache is equipped with three weapon types: a machine gun and two types of missiles of different strength. During the missions, the player must beware anti-aircraft guns, missile launchers and tanks, outmaneuvering enemy fire or destroying the enemy weaponry. The Apache is destroyed if its fuel runs out, or if the armor (functioning as health) is completely depleted. However, armor can be replenished by bringing back MIA soldiers and prisoners of war back to the landing zone. There are also fuel, ammo and armor pickups available on the field.
Tournament Cyberball is the sequel to Cyberball. The Cyberball series is a sci-fi imagining of American Football featuring giant robots as players, and a ticking time bomb as the ball. Players run plays, in the usual configurations familiar to American football games (pass plays, run plays, and options plays), in order to progress downfield and score touchdowns. Instead of downs and conversions in the usual sense, each time a team runs a play without passing the yardage necessary to achieve a first down, the ball gets hotter, eventually becoming critical. If the team with a critical ball fails to score or achieve a first down, the ball explodes, and any robot player holding the ball at the time is destroyed as well. The game does not feature field goals.
Cyberball 2072 can be played either competitively or co-operatively. Each play, the offensive player plays the quarterback, and if a human player is playing on the same team, that player selects which robot they will control for that play. The defensive player(s)
Cybervirus is one of the most highly sought-after "lost" games for the Atari Lynx. Now, Songbird has acquired this game from former developer Beyond Games (along with Ultra Vortex and Mechtiles). Finally, a first person mission game for the Atari Lynx!
Cybervirus puts you in the role of the last surviving member of the Demolitions Ops Guerillas (or DOGs) of War. You've got to stop the horde of bio-mechanical nasties that are threating mankind with extinction!
Only 25 units of this limited edition game were made. The game included eight missions, at least two of which did not appear in the future general release of CyberVirus. Both the cartridge label and opening screens indicated this was the special CinciClassic version.
This handheld chess game uses Chessmaster 2100's basic game engine. This includes such items as en passant attacks for pawn, castling, check and checkmate, and draws for various reasons. Move time limits are optional, and the CPU's thinking time can be specified. If you need a hint, you can press the B button and the computer may or may not give you a hint. You can also play against another human opponent, alternating.
In 2000, Songbird Productions produced a sequel, Crystal Mines II: Buried Treasure on CD-ROM for Microsoft Windows. This CD-ROM required the original game and a Lynx to PC serial cable to run, allowing the editing and creation of all new levels. This was followed in 2003 by a cartridge release of Crystal Mines II: Buried Treasure with the original 181 levels and 125 new levels.