Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
The Atari Jaguar is a fifth generation home video game console developed by Atari Corporation and manufactured by IBM. [1] [2] First released in North America on November 23, 1993, the Jaguar was fifth home console under the Atari name. [3] [4] The following list includes aftermarket post-releases, as well as homebrew games made by the ...
The only peripherals and add-ons released by Atari for the Jaguar are a redesigned controller, an adapter for four players, a CD console add-on, and a link cable for local area network (LAN) gaming. The redesigned second controller, the ProController by Atari, added three more face buttons and two triggers. [55]
Battlemorph was pitched by ATD to Atari after the launch of Cybermorph, being announced in 1994 as one of the first upcoming titles for the Jaguar CD add-on. The team wanted to make a sequel and implement ideas that they were not able to include, while also using techniques learned late during development of the first game to improve the ...
[1] [2] By 1996, the Jaguar and game development for it were discontinued. [ 3 ] [ 4 ] The best-selling game is Alien vs Predator , with 52,223 copies as of April 1, 1995. [ 5 ] Hasbro declared the Jaguar as an open platform in 1999, releasing the console's patents and rights into public domain , allowing software developers to make and release ...
Black Out! was created by Stormworks Interactive, a small Texas-based game developer. [3] [4] [5] They were one of the few independent developers committed to Atari Jaguar, at the time after Hasbro Interactive released the console's patents and rights into public domain in 1999.
After its release on PCs, Vid Grid was later ported to the Atari Jaguar CD by High Voltage Software, where it became one of the two bundled titles with the add-on during its launch on September 21, 1995, [16] [17] [18] serving as a showcase of the system's full motion video capabilities.
Cybermorph is a shooter video game developed by Attention to Detail (ATD) and published by Atari Corporation as the pack-in game for the Atari Jaguar in North America on November 23, 1993, and Europe in June 1994. It was also distributed in Japan by Mumin Corporation as a stand-alone release.
Ruiner Pinball was created by High Voltage Software (HVS), which previously worked on a video game adaptation of the 1992 sports comedy film White Men Can't Jump for Atari Jaguar. [ 7 ] [ 8 ] [ 9 ] The game was programmed by Scott Corley as his first work in the video game industry .