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Excitebike 64 [a] is a racing video game developed by Left Field Productions and published by Nintendo for the Nintendo 64.It was released on May 2, 2000 in North America, June 23 in Japan, and June 8, 2001, in Europe.
There are two game modes within TT Superbikes Real Road Racing: Arcade and Challenge.Arcade is the primary game mode, housing standard races, times trials and "Mad Sunday", an event in which the track is also occupied by civilian drivers, who the player can use to their advantage; successfully maneuvering around this traffic awards a speed boost.
The game's engine and assets would be reused for Super Mad Champ, which was originally planned to be a Kunio-kun bike racing game but was revamped into an original game. Kishimoto wrote a draft for a Kunio-tachi no Banka sequel titled Nekketsu Kōha Kunio-kun: Kowloon no Tsume ( 熱血硬派くにおくん ~九龍の爪~ , The Claw of ...
The game is a simulation of real mountain biking in which the player can select between many characters and many mountain bikes ranging from mediocre to excellent in many categories. It was the first game to support the Life Fitness Entertainment System, an exercise bike peripheral for the SNES. [ 2 ]
Nitrobike is a dirt-bike racing video game for the Wii and PlayStation 2. [1] It is published by Ubisoft and was developed by Left Field Productions, the developer previously responsible for, among other games, Excitebike 64, MTX Mototrax and Dave Mirra BMX Challenge.
World Rally was developed by Monster Games and announced in October 2009 through the NOA edition of the Nintendo Channel, via an episode of Nintendo Week.In an interview on 1UP's Retro Gaming Blog, the developers of the game "wanted to approach this project with a clean slate and take advantage of the new abilities of the Wii: the 3-D graphics, the motion controls and the availability of Wi-Fi ...
Dirt Trax FX is a racing video game developed by Sculptured Software and released by Acclaim Entertainment for the Super Nintendo Entertainment System in 1995. The 3D graphics of the game were made possible by the Super FX powered GSU-1, which was built into the cartridge.
Stunt Cycle is an arcade video game by Atari, Inc., originally released in 1976. [1] In the style of the Evel Knievel craze of the mid-1970s, the game allows the player to perform simulated motorcycle jumping stunts. The arcade cabinet is modeled like a real motorcycle handlebar, and the player twists the right side for acceleration.