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  2. 1976 in video games - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/1976_in_video_games

    The game is a hit in the United States but becomes even bigger in Japan when it is released by Namco. Block breaker games in the country create the first video game boom. [3] October – Heavyweight Champ by Sega premieres and features early one-on-one dueling between two human opponents, considered by some to be the first fighting game. [Note 3]

  3. Flight Unlimited - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Flight_Unlimited

    Certain camera angles, including the Three-Way View and 3-D Cockpit view, provide the player with simulated flight instruments such as an altimeter, airspeed indicator, accelerometer, variometer and tachometer. [3] The game is designed to allow players to perform aerobatic maneuvers such as the Immelmann turn, tailslide, Lomcevak and Cuban ...

  4. List of commercial video games with available source code ...

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_commercial_video...

    Source code released to the public under no license on 11 June 2021, upon the cancellation of the game. [3] Barotrauma: 2017 Role-playing video game: restrictive (only mods) [4] Proprietary: Undertow Games / Joonas "Regalis" Rikkonen The game was released in 2017 commercially on Steam by independent developer Undertow Games (Joonas "Regalis ...

  5. Fly Guy (video game) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fly_Guy_(video_game)

    Gameplay in Fly Guy is minimal; players control a man with the arrow keys, letting him move left and right and fly up and down. Throughout the world of the game, players can encounter many abstract and nonsensical things, such as a floating monk, a sumo wrestler, and a man tiling bricks to make the sky, revealing a starry backdrop behind them.

  6. Pilotwings 64 - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pilotwings_64

    Pilotwings 64 [a] is a 1996 flight simulation video game developed by Nintendo and Paradigm Simulation and published by Nintendo for the Nintendo 64.It was one of three launch titles for the Nintendo 64 in Japan as well as Europe and one of two launch titles in North America, along with Super Mario 64.

  7. Fly Guy - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fly_Guy

    Fly Guy may refer to: Fly Guy (video game) , a 2002 flash game created by Trevor van Meter Fly Guy (character) , a character in a series of children's books by Tedd Arnold

  8. Flying Shark - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Flying_Shark

    It was the third shoot 'em up game from Toaplan, and their eighth video game overall. Flying Shark was ported to multiple systems, each version created by different third-party developers . The game proved to be a success for Toaplan among players in Japanese arcades and garnered mostly positive reception from western critics, but the game was ...

  9. Turn and Burn: No-Fly Zone - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Turn_and_Burn:_No-Fly_Zone

    Turn and Burn: No-Fly Zone is a jet flight simulator from Absolute Entertainment for the Super NES, released in 1994. [2] It is the sequel to Turn and Burn: The F-14 Dogfight Simulator, a Game Boy game which also featured the F-14 Tomcat aircraft. An enhanced port of this game was released as F-14 Tomcat on Game Boy Advance.