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Rocky Mountain Trophy Hunter: Interactive Big Game Hunting is a video game developed by Sunstorm and published by WizardWorks for Microsoft Windows and Mac OS in 1998. A Game Boy Color adaptation was developed by Xantera and Running Dog Software and published by Infogrames in 2000. [2] [3]
Big Buck Hunter is a game hunting video game developed by Play Mechanix. Primarily developed for arcades , the goal of the game is to shoot moving bucks or male animals without shooting a doe or female animal.
It is an expansion pack for the Windows version of Rocky Mountain Trophy Hunter: Interactive Big Game Hunting; New weapons include crossbow and .30-06 rifle [5] It was later bundled with Rocky Mountain Trophy Hunter: Interactive Big Game Hunting under the title Rocky Mountain Trophy Hunter: Special Edition Two-Pack [3]
Deer Hunter is a series of hunting simulation video games. Originally available for Windows platform published by WizardWorks, it has since been published on MacOS, Game Boy Color, PlayStation 2, and mobile phones. The first Deer Hunter game was an early success in the casual game market. [1] The original game was released in November 1997.
Redneck Deer Huntin' (released in Europe as Deer Stalker) is a hunting simulation video game developed by Xatrix Entertainment and published by Interplay Entertainment for MS-DOS and Microsoft Windows in 1998. It is a spinoff of the 1997 first-person shooter Redneck Rampage. It was later re-released for Steam (both Windows and macOS) in 2017.
Cabela's Alaskan Adventures (also known as Cabela's Big Game Hunter: 10th Anniversary Edition – Alaskan Adventure for Windows) is a 2006 hunting video game developed by Sand Grain Studios, Fun Labs and Magic Wand Productions and published by Activision for the Xbox 360 and PlayStation 2 video game consoles and Microsoft Windows.
The impetus for the game was a Wal-Mart executive commenting to a WizardWorks sales representative that if he had a game about deer hunting, he could sell thousands of copies. [3] The game was developed by a five-member team in three months with a budget of $125,000. [4] The game had two add-packs, Deer Hunter Extended Season and Deer Hunter ...
The game shipped more than 500,000 units by October 1998 [14] [2] [1] and more than 800,000 by January 1999. [15] According to PC Data Deer Hunter II was the best-selling game of November 1998, it was also the best-selling piece of PC software for that month, beating out the Windows 98 upgrade.