Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
JumpStart Games, Inc., formerly Knowledge Adventure, Inc., was an American edutainment video game company based in Torrance, California. Founded in 1991, it was acquired by Chinese holding company NetDragon Websoft in 2017.
Spacebase DF-9 is a space simulator video game developed by Double Fine Productions. [1] It was prototyped during Double Fine's open Amnesia Fortnight 2012 , directed by JP Lebreton. [ 2 ] After being released as an open beta on October 15, 2013, it was officially released on October 27, 2014, for Microsoft Windows , OS X , and Linux . [ 3 ]
Rebecca Ann Heineman was born William Salvador Heineman [1] on October 30, 1963, [2] [3] and raised in Whittier, California. [4] When she was young, she could not afford to purchase games for her Atari 2600, so she taught herself how to copy cartridges and built herself a sizable pirated video game collection.
The game and creator are portrayed very similarly to Star Wars and George Lucas. Space Paranoids – an arcade game created by Kevin Flynn and featured in Tron (1982) Striking Vipers – a VR fighting game from the Black Mirror episode of the same title. Wrestle Jam 88 – from the movie The Wrestler (2008)
After the second game was released, Sierra acquired another company, Bright Star Technology, known for its educational games. The series was turned over to a Bright Star team, explaining the change in direction from the second game to the third. [1] The third and fourth are The Lost Mind of Dr. Brain (1995) and The Time Warp of Dr. Brain (1996).
Broken Age is a point-and-click adventure video game developed and published by Double Fine. [6] Broken Age was game director Tim Schafer's first return to the genre since 1998's Grim Fandango, and was released for Microsoft Windows, macOS, Linux, iOS, Android, PlayStation 4, PlayStation Vita, and Xbox One platforms.
After a decade of wanting to bring "Double Dare" back to Nickelodeon, original host Marc Summers has finally gotten his wish: The network's longest-running game show, which originally aired from ...
Xonox, based in Minnesota, started developing Atari cartridges during the height of the 2600's popularity. [1] Xonox capitalized on the novelty and perceived value of "double-ender" cartridges.