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The Cutting Room Floor (TCRF) is a website dedicated to the cataloguing of unused content and leftover debugging material in video games. The site and its discoveries have been referenced in the gaming press. The site started out as part of a blog but was reworked and relaunched as a wiki in 2010.
This game is based on the real-life board game of mahjong solitaire, and involves the character girls stripping as the player succeeds in the game. [5] Poker Pretty Girls Battle: Texas Hold'em is set on a tropical resort and features a total of 16 girls. The game uses the rules of Texas hold'em. [6] Delicious!
ZeptoLab (stylised as zeptolab) is a video game developer best known for developing the Cut the Rope series, which has been downloaded more than 2 billion times since its release, [3] and can be played on major platforms including Android, iOS, Windows Phone, HTML5 web browsers, macOS, Nintendo DSi and Nintendo 3DS.
The game is set in the 17th century in the Caribbean and unlike most pirate games, it is mostly historically accurate. The game world is covered with settlements according to the time period the player picks at the start (and evolves accordingly as the game progresses) and each settlement is ruled by one of the five new world powers, Spain, England, France, The Netherlands and Denmark.
Budget Cuts is an independent virtual reality stealth game developed and published by Swedish studio Neat Corporation. [4] The player is tasked with escaping an office building using a portal device while evading detection from robotic managers. [5]
Strike Suit Zero is a story-driven single player game where the player assumes the role of a fighter pilot of a transforming mecha for the United Nations of Earth (U.N.E) in a massive war against the combined forces of the space colonies. The game is designed so that the battles do not revolve entirely around the player; a complete battle ...
Video game console operating system: Microsoft: In May 2020, the Xbox operating system source code was leaked. Zork and other Infocom games 1977 2008 Various Adventure game: Infocom: In 2008 a back-up with the source code of all Infocom's video games appeared from an anonymous Infocom source and was archived by the Internet Archive's Jason Scott.
Most notably GameSpot gave the game a 3.9 [32] and IGN gave it a 7.7, [33] emphasising the game's mixed reviews. [citation needed] GamesRadar noted that the games uses a "brooding, silent atmosphere" to "slowly build up the tension and terror". [34] Game Chrinocle offered a positive review on the horror aspects of the game. [35]