A crossword is a word puzzle that normally takes the form of a square or rectangular grid of white and shaded squares. The goal is to fill the white squares with letters, forming words or phrases, by solving clues which lead to the answers. In languages that are written left-to-right, the answer words and phrases are placed in the grid from left to right and from top to bottom. The shaded squares are used to separate the words or phrases.
Squares in which answers begin are usually numbered. The clues are then referred to by these numbers and a direction, for example, "4-Across" or "20-Down". At the end of the clue the total number of letters is sometimes given, depending on the style of puzzle and country of publication. Some crosswords will also indicate the number of words in a given answer, should there be more than one.
Shutokō Battle R is the third installment in the Shutokō Battle series for the PlayStation. This time, however, the action is not limited to Tokyo - it has spread to the Osaka metropolitan area. There are three game modes to choose from:
Scenario: Try to beat the clock as well as your competitors to the finish line. The points you earn can be used to upgrade your car in the machine shop.
Practice: You can practice driving before you try it on the real thing.
Link Race: Connect another PlayStation and play against another player.
The more opponents you defeat, the quicker you will be able to meet the challenge of professional driver and street legend Keiichi Tsuchiya.
Kattobi Tune is a circuit/tune edition unique episode of the Shutoko Battle series (aka Tokyo Xtreme Racers). Kattobi Tune was compiled under the supervision of Rev Speed, a popular Japanese car tuning magazine and features seven licensed professional tuners, RE Amemiya, Spoon, Mine's, Trial, "RS Yamamoto", Garage Saurus and JUN Auto, appearing years later in Racing Battle: C1 Grand Prix and also in the influential Gran Turismo series by Polyphony Digital.
In Kattobi Tune's career, you follow a text-driven story as you slowly work your way towards faster and faster cars, either by an extensive car tuning
The Namco Museum port of Pac-Man.
This version of the game, introduced in Namco Museum Volume 1 (1995), is notable for being perhaps the most frequently rereleased "official" version of Pac-Man from 1995 to 2005. This version of the game often featured a border based on the classic Puckman artwork surrounding it. Being based off the original's source code, it is mostly faithful to the arcade version, but a few things were altered in gameplay:
Pinky always aims exactly four spaces in front of Pac-Man when in chase mode (in the original, this became four spaces up and four spaces to the left when Pac-Man was facing up, due to a glitch). Inky's behavior has been considerably altered; he exclusively aims for Blinky's position in chase mode.
The ghosts' eyes will not travel up through the one-way paths when returning to regenerate. When a ghost is sent back to the Ghost Home to regenerate, they will always come back out instantly, even if Pac-Man lost a life on the current round. (Incidentally, this fixes a glitch th
Taking the nature of virtual pets to an altogether deeper level, Pet in TV lets you raise an artificial pet (P.I.T.), train it to obey you, feed and pamper it, and teach it everything it needs to know about its new virtual world.
Though the P.I.T.'s outward appearance is akin to a robotic motorised egg, with the right nurturing it can grow and become more intelligent just like a real pet. Once it is fully trained, your P.I.T. can then explore its virtual world in search of valuable AI-chips that can later be used to build the ultimate Gold P.I.T. pet.
Each P.I.T. has its own personality, which you can choose before it is "born"; cheeky ones tend to be more adventurous, quiet ones more obedient - the choice of P.I.T. personality governs just how you and your P.I.T. will get along!
First re-release of Resident Evil 2, the Dual Shock Ver. incorporated support for the PlayStation's DualShock analog controller and vibration functions. Also included is a new unlockable mini-game called "Extreme Battle" and a "Rookie" mode, which allows the player to start the main story with a powerful weapon with infinite ammo.
Winky the Little Bear is a single player game aimed at younger children. There is a big storm in the forest. Teddy and Mi are swept up into the air and land in a very high tree and get stuck in it's branches. Their friends come to rescue them but can they succeed?
The game consists of a a Dingo Pictures animated film titled Winkie der kleine Bär, six paintings that can be coloured in and six scenes that can be turned into sliding block puzzles
The game was later released on the PlayStation 2 as Countryside Bears. It's the same game as the PlayStation version but adds a jigsaw puzzle mode and a pair matching mini game.
This port for the Playstation was only released in Japan 2 years after the original PC version. It features new graphics, re-worked interface to accommodate the controller, the news paper is replaced with a TV broadcast of the news, as well as updated sound.
Pachi Pachi Saga is a role-playing game released by TEN Kenkyuujo on Playstation in 1996. This game includes Japanese pachinko elements. Your ability to attack in battle is determined by the design of the drums. Also, if you collect pachinko balls, you can exchange them for items.
Startling Adventures is an adventure game, developed and published by Capcom, which was released in Japan, 2001 for the original PlayStation console. The game contains three stories.