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Happy Tree Friends: False Alarm is a video game based on the Flash cartoon series Happy Tree Friends developed by independent software developer Stainless Games and published by Sega. It was scheduled to be released in fall 2007 and then April 2008, but was delayed and released on June 25, 2008, for Microsoft Windows and Xbox 360 .
The concept for Minit was inspired by an earlier project from Jan Willem Nijman and Kitty Calis when they participated in an Adventure Time-themed game jam in 2012. The original game involved 1-minute long episodes. Years later, Willem and Calis wanted to make a new game with the same concept and recruited Jukio Kallio and Dominik Johann. [4]
The game is designed to be played with at least two players, with one player as the "Defuser", playing the game on a device (supporting both keyboard and mouse, touchscreen and gamepad controls, as well as support for virtual reality headsets), and the remaining players as the "Experts" reading the provided bomb defusal manual.
All Dogs Go to Heaven (video game) An American Tail: Fievel Goes West (video game) An American Tail: The Computer Adventures of Fievel and His Friends; Anastasia: Adventures with Pooka and Bartok; Angry Birds Rio; The Ant Bully (video game) Antz (video game) Arthur and the Invisibles (video game) Astro Boy: The Video Game
Bebe's Kids is a side-scrolling beat 'em up video game developed by Radical Entertainment and published by Motown Games/Paramount Interactive for the Super Nintendo Entertainment System, released in 1994. It is based on the 1992 animated film of the same title, and matched its yielding of largely unfavorable critical reception.
In this version, the game is played with four cube-shaped electronic modules that the player must move around depending on the game mode. [6] In 2013, Hasbro reinvented Simon once again with Simon Swipe. The game was demonstrated at the New York Toy Fair 2014 and released that summer. [7] The game is a circular unit that looks like a steering ...
Time for Timer is a series of seven short public service announcements broadcast on Saturday mornings on the ABC television network starting in 1975. The animated spots feature Timer, a tiny cartoon character who is an anthropomorphic circadian rhythm , the self-proclaimed "keeper of body time."
The gang gets ready for a video game match, only for it to be cancelled due to a power outage. The gang panics as their phones are also dead (because Hank had unplugged their chargers for his lava lamp). Tom notes that the gang has become far too much reliant on technology, and while checking the mail box for the first time in a while, he finds ...