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Each puzzle solved builds a piece of escape raft. As with previous Wally games humour plays an important part in both the gameplay and puzzle solving. The graphics were detailed and the Spectrum version had an option to switch off Wally's natural colour, which would remove the colour clash. The ZX Spectrum +128 version included enhanced sound ...
In each issue Wally travelled to a different country or region of the world giving the reader interesting facts. 52 issues were published from January 1997 to January 1998, when Wally's History of the World began, focusing more on history than geography. The first issue was given away free with the last issue of Wally's World.
Yoshi's Woolly World [a] is a 2015 platform game developed by Good-Feel and published by Nintendo for the Wii U. The game is the seventh main entry in the Yoshi series of games and the first home console title in the series since 1997's Yoshi's Story , as well as the spiritual successor to 2010's Kirby's Epic Yarn .
Pyjamarama is a video game for the ZX Spectrum, Amstrad CPC, and the Commodore 64.It features Wally Week as the central character and is the second (after Automania) of a series of games featuring Wally and/or members of his family.
Wally World may refer to: Walmart, an American retail chain; Walley World, a fictional theme park in the 1983 film National Lampoon's Vacation
Everyone's a Wally was the first arcade adventure game to feature multiple playable characters: Wally Week (a builder and handyman), Wilma (his wife), Tom (a punk mechanic), Dick (a plumber) and Harry (a hippie electrician). [2] Herbert, the baby son of Wally and Wilma, appeared in the game as a mobile hazard NPC. The player can change ...
HONOLULU (AP) — Wallace “Wally” Amos, the creator of the cookie empire that took his name and made it famous and who went on to become a children’s literacy advocate, has died. He was 88.
Mikro-Gen was a UK software company based in Bracknell, Berkshire that produced games for home computers in the early to mid-1980s. The company was formed by Mike Meek and Andrew Laurie in 1981, in order to capitalise on the growing boom of microcomputers in the home. [ 1 ]