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The game is being produced by Yoichi Miyaji, who previously worked on entries in the Lunar and Grandia games. [8] The game's designer and scenario writer, Yuri Shibamura, went to great lengths to capture the nostalgic and iconic aspects of Japan and its culture, particularly from the 1980s. [ 3 ]
Video games in this category involve games where a major plot element, if not the central element to the game, is where a character is stuck in a time loop. Pages in category "Video games about time loops"
Cannon Rats (keypad-based mobile phones); Captain America (based on the comic book superhero of the same name; Android, iOS); Carmen Sandiego (2025) (Netflix, PC, PlayStation 4, PlayStation 5, Nintendo Switch, Xbox One, Xbox Series X/S)
[10] [11] A compulsion loop may involve two or different gameplay modes that feed each other. For example, in Cult of the Lamb, one half of the game is a roguelike hack-n-slash system which the player can use to gather resources, which are then used in the game's other half, a settlement management simulation. By advancing the settlement, the ...
Loop Mania is an endless arcade video game which has the player controlling a white circle revolving around the inside of an outlined circle. The circle while revolving collects medium-sized dots that are called "coins" which add to the overall score above. [ 1 ]
Magnetica (known in Japan as Shunkan Puzzloop (瞬感パズループ, Shunkan Pazurūpu) and in Europe as Actionloop) is a puzzle video game developed by Mitchell Corporation and published by Nintendo for the Nintendo DS, It was released as part of the Touch! Generations series. It is based on Mitchell's 1998 arcade game Puzz Loop. [1]
Looping was the second of two original games produced by German game developer Video Games GmbH, the first being Super Tank (1981). [7] [8] It was developed in Parma, Italy by designer and engineer Giorgio Ugozzoli, who previously created the pinball machine Timothy T in the 1970s and engineered several electronic toys using the TMS1000, serving as his first commercial video game and recounted ...
Loopz is a puzzle video game designed and programmed by Ian Upton for the Atari ST in 1989. He previously worked as head game designer for Audiogenic, who acquired exclusive rights to the game, then in 1990 arranged for Mindscape to publish it for computers in North America and consoles worldwide.