Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
A beat 'em up (also known as brawler and, in some markets, beat 'em all [1]) is a video game genre featuring hand-to-hand combat against a large number of opponents. . Traditional beat 'em ups take place in scrolling, two-dimensional (2D) levels, while a number of modern games feature more open three-dimensional (3D) environments with yet larger numbers
Alpha Mission, known as ASO: Armored Scrum Object [a] in Japan, is a vertically scrolling shooter developed by SNK and released as an arcade video game in 1985 by Namco in Japan and Tradewest in North America. It was later ported to the Famicom in 1986 and released for the Nintendo Entertainment System in 1987.
Scrolling shooters include vertical and horizontal scrolling games or combinations of both orientations. In vertically scrolling shooters (or "vertically scrolling shoot 'em ups" or "vertical scrollers"), the action is viewed from above and scrolls up (or very occasionally down) the screen.
Anett Futatabi [1] is a side scrolling, beat-em-up video game developed and published by Wolf Team for the Mega CD hardware add-on for the Mega Drive. It is the final in a trilogy of games that also includes Earnest Evans and El Viento. [2] The game was released only in Japan in 1993. [3]
Scrolling shooters are a type of shoot 'em up game that emphasizes fast-paced shooting on a large scrolling playfield with many enemies.. Scrolling shooters are further divided into horizontal (side view) and vertical (top view) shoot 'em ups, but there are also some borderline cases like alternating horizontal and vertical stages in Konami's Axelay
Sailor Moon (1993 video game) Scott Pilgrim vs. the World: The Game; Sengoku (1991 video game) Sengoku 2; Sengoku 3; Shank (video game) Shank 2; River City Girls Zero; The Simpsons (video game) Skeleton Warriors (video game) Space Jam: A New Legacy (video game) Spider-Man and Venom: Maximum Carnage; Spider-Man: The Video Game; Spinmaster ...
The original "Audience Reaction Indicator" used on British TV game show Opportunity Knocks. One of the first appearances of a clap-o-meter was in 1956, on the British TV game show Opportunity Knocks, developed and presented by Hughie Green. The clap-o-meter itself was a wooden box labelled "Audience Reaction Indicator".
Scrolling shooters include vertical, horizontal, and multidirectional scrolling games. In a horizontally scrolling shooter (sometimes called a horizontal shooter or side-scrolling shooter ), the action is viewed from the side and scrolls right-to-left, left-to-right, or both.