Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
Garry Kitchen's Battletank is an action video game released by Absolute Entertainment in September 1990 for the Nintendo Entertainment System. The game is similar to the Atari game Battlezone, and supports one player. Code from its development was meant for a space flight game for the Commodore 64. [2]
Garry Kitchen (born August 18, 1955) is a video game designer, programmer, and executive best known for his work at Activision during the early years of the company's history. He has developed games for the Atari 2600 , Commodore 64 , Nintendo Entertainment System , and Super Nintendo Entertainment System , as well as co-founded Absolute ...
Garry Kitchen's Super Battletank: War in the Gulf is a 1992 tank simulation single-player video game which takes place during Operation Desert Storm. The player controls an M1 Abrams main battle tank for the United Nations. A sequel, Super Battletank 2, was released for the Super NES in 1994.
Absolute Entertainment was an American video game publishing company. Through its development house, Imagineering, Absolute Entertainment produced titles for the Atari 2600, Atari 7800, Game Gear, Genesis/Mega Drive, Sega CD, Game Boy, Nintendo Entertainment System, and Super NES video game consoles, as well as for the Commodore 64, Apple II, and IBM PC compatibles.
Super Battletank: Garry Kitchen's Super Battletank: War in the Gulf: Video game Super Hockey: NHL Stanley Cup: Video game Super Pang: Super Buster Bros. Video game Super Strike Gunner: Strike Gunner S.T.G: Video game Super SWIV: Firepower 2000: Video game Thunder Force IV: Lightening Force: Quest for the Darkstar: Video game TOCA 2 Touring Cars*
This video game is the sequel to Super Battletank, and the player controls a M1A2 Battletank. [3] There are 16 missions, all located in the Middle East. [3] Using radar, the player must scout out groups of enemy tanks and use the primary turret to take out infantrymen, jeeps, SCUD missiles, and armored personnel carriers. [3]
It was initially reported that the game was a part of the company's Super Battletank series. [2] [3] [4] In December 1994, Absolute invited members of the press to their development studio in Upper Saddle River, New Jersey to showcase RDF as well as some other projects. Journalists were transported to the Iron Hammer Training Facility ...
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.