Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
Missile Command was a commercial success for Sega in Japan, where it was among the top-ten highest-grossing arcade video games of 1980. [12] In 1983, Softline readers named Missile Command for the Atari 8-bit computers eighth on the magazine's Top Thirty list of Atari programs by popularity. [13]
It was later released in Japan as F-15 Super Strike Eagle (F-15スーパーストライクイーグル, F-15 Sūpā Sutoraiku Īguru). The game involves flying airplanes that tests the player's Sidewinder missile and machine gun firing skills against various non-aligned nations that were historically notorious for housing extremist leaders ...
Air Combat (arcade game) Air Power (video game) Air Warrior (video game) Air Warrior II; Air Warrior III; Airfight; Airforce Delta (video game) AirForce Delta Storm; Airforce Delta Strike; Apache (video game) Apache Strike; Apache: Air Assault; Attack on Pearl Harbor (video game) AV-8B Harrier Assault
A video game, WarGames, was released for the ColecoVision in 1983 and ported to the Atari 8-bit computers and Commodore 64 in 1984. It played similarly to the NORAD side of the "Global Thermonuclear War" game, where the United States had to be defended from a Soviet strike by placing bases and weapons at strategic points.
The Naval Strike Missile (NSM) is an anti-ship and land-attack missile developed by the Norwegian company Kongsberg Defence & Aerospace (KDA). The original Norwegian name was Nytt sjømålsmissil (literally "New sea target missile", indicating that it was the successor of the Penguin missile). The English marketing name Naval Strike Missile was ...
Desert Strike is a shoot 'em up game in which the player pilots an AH-64 Apache helicopter (albeit modified with a Fenestron rotor). The game is less frantic than typical shoot 'em ups, with the addition of greater strategic elements. [5] The action takes place on open, multi-directional scrolling levels viewed from an isometric perspective. [6]
Nuclear Strike is a shooter video game developed and published by Electronic Arts for the PlayStation in 1997. The game is the sequel to Soviet Strike and the fifth installment in the Strike series, which began with Desert Strike on the Sega Genesis.
This is a list of light-gun games, video games that use a non-fixed gun controller, organized by the arcade, video game console or home computer system that they were made available for. Ports of light-gun games which do not support a light gun (e.g. the Sega Saturn version of Corpse Killer ) are not included in this list.