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Epic Mickey is primarily a platform game and allows players to use their own solutions for getting through the levels. Epic Mickey features a morality system similar to games like Infamous, Spider-Man: Web of Shadows and Shadow the Hedgehog. Different alliances, side-quests and power-ups are made available depending on the choices of the player ...
Epic Mickey 2: The Power of Two is a 2012 platform game developed by Junction Point Studios and published by Disney Interactive Studios and the sequel to 2010's Epic Mickey. Unlike its predecessor, which was only released for the Wii , the game was released on the PlayStation 3 , Wii, Wii U and Xbox 360 in November 2012 and would make further ...
Epic Mickey: Power of Illusion is a 2012 platform game developed by DreamRift and published by Disney Interactive Studios for the Nintendo 3DS.It is the third part of the Epic Mickey series, released alongside Epic Mickey 2: The Power of Two, and is touted as a tribute to Sega's Illusion series of Mickey Mouse games, particularly Castle of Illusion Starring Mickey Mouse.
2010's Epic Mickey is one of the few games that legitimately made me mad. Oh, there are plenty of games I play that I can't stand; games that are so bad -- but there are very few games that ...
Articles relating to Epic Mickey, a 2010 platform game developed by Junction Point Studios and published by Disney Interactive Studios for the Wii.The game focuses on Mickey Mouse, who accidentally damages a world created by Yen Sid for forgotten characters and concepts and must save it from the Blot.
Retrieved from "https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Disney_Epic_Mickey_2:_The_Power_of_Two&oldid=510231943"
During the planning phase, Disney's Imagineers perfected the Audio-Animatronics (AA) technology necessary to operate the "performers" in the show, using technologies similar to those in Walt Disney's Enchanted Tiki Room and Great Moments with Mr. Lincoln, another attraction designed by Disney for the 1964–1965 New York World's Fair.
Artwork by Dick Frizzell. Frizzell's exhibition Tiki in November 1992 at Auckland's Gow Langsford Gallery aroused controversy for his series of paintings reworking the tiki image to resemble subjects as varied as Casper the Friendly Ghost and a Picasso abstract.