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Images relating to the video game series Crash Bandicoot. ... File:Crash Bandicoot 3 Warped Original Box Art.jpg; File:Crash Bandicoot Cover.png; File:Crash Bandicoot ...
The pages in this category are redirects from Crash Bandicoot fictional characters. To add a redirect to this category, place {{Fictional character redirect|series_name=Crash Bandicoot}} on the second new line (skip a line) after #REDIRECT [[Target page name]].
Crash Bandicoot is the title character and main protagonist of the Crash Bandicoot franchise. Introduced in the 1996 video game Crash Bandicoot, Crash is a mutant eastern barred bandicoot who was genetically enhanced by the series' main antagonist Doctor Neo Cortex and soon escaped from Cortex's castle after a failed experiment in the "Cortex Vortex".
Crash Bandicoot is a video game series created by Andy Gavin and Jason Rubin. [1] It is published by Activision, Sierra Entertainment, Vivendi Universal Games, Konami, Universal Interactive Studios, King, and Sony Computer Entertainment, with entries developed by Polarbit, Toys for Bob, Beenox, Radical Entertainment, Vicarious Visions, Traveller's Tales, Eurocom, King and Naughty Dog.
The Crash Bandicoot series has been a commercial success. As of 2007, the series altogether has sold over 40 million units worldwide [133] and grossed over $1 billion. [134] According to Gamasutra, the first Crash Bandicoot game had sold 6.8 million units as of November 2003, [135] making it the tenth-best-selling PlayStation game of all time.
Nine returning characters from previous Crash titles star in the home console version of Crash: Mind over Mutant. The protagonist of the game, Crash Bandicoot, is a bandicoot who must defeat the main antagonist Doctor Cortex and free the Titans from the control of Cortex's new device. Aiding Crash is Aku Aku, an ancient wooden mask who can take ...
Crash Bandicoot ' s success continued into 1997, in which it was the tenth best selling video game in the United States. [95] In May 1997, Crash Bandicoot became the first non-Japanese game to receive a "Gold Prize" in Japan for sales of over 500,000 units, and in September 1997, it was inducted into the Greatest Hits budget range. [24] [96]
Ripper Roo appears as a boss character in Crash Bandicoot, Crash Bandicoot 2: Cortex Strikes Back and Crash Team Racing, [65] [66] [67] and as an obstacle in the "El Pogo Loco" level of Crash Bash. [68] Ripper Roo's laughter in the original PlayStation titles is a sample of a hyena (voiced by Dallas McKennon) from the 1955 film Lady and the ...