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The game's graphics and gameplay are styled after 1990s arcade racing games, such as Daytona USA and Indy 500. Under the title The '90s Arcade Racer, it was funded on Kickstarter in early 2013 for £16,000. It was renamed ' 90s Super GP in 2016, set to be released for the Nintendo Switch, PlayStation 4, and Windows.
In October 2020, Arcade1Up successfully completed a Kickstarter for its Infinity Table, a table with a built-in touchscreen programmed for numerous board and card games, including several licensed from Hasbro, based on the same design principles behind their arcade cabinet reconstructions. [8]
Time Killers is a 1992 weapon-based fighting arcade game developed by Incredible Technologies and published by Strata. Along with Allumer's Blandia, Time Killers is one of the earliest weapon-based fighting games modeled after Capcom's Street Fighter II (1991).
Snowcastle Games Kickstarter: Apr 11, 2014: $150,000 $178,193 Turn-based RPG. Second Kickstarter campaign for the game, with a lowered target after the failure of the first campaign. Sep 27, 2016 [225] Dragon Fin Soup: Grimm Bros Kickstarter: Apr 11, 2014: $24,000 $119,719 RPG set in a dark fairy tale-inspired world featuring roguelike elements ...
Pages in category "Kickstarter-funded video games" The following 200 pages are in this category, out of approximately 354 total. This list may not reflect recent changes .
Game Over, by David Sheff; Playing the Past: History and Nostalgia in Video Games, edited by Zach Whalen, and Laurie N. Taylor; The Rough Guide To Videogames, by Karen Berens and Geoff Howard; Ultimate Supercade: A Visual History of the Videogame Age 1971–1984, by Van Burnham; The Ultimate History of Video Games, by Steve L. Kent
Mighty No. 9 centers around an android named Beck (Yuri Lowenthal / Ayumu Murase), the ninth unit in a set of advanced combat and utility robots called the Mighty Numbers.A computer virus unleashed by a mysterious hacker suddenly corrupts the programming of the eight previous Mighty Numbers and hundreds of other machines across the world, causing them to turn on their human creators.
Flashpoint game in progress. The game's development was crowdfunded through a Kickstarter campaign, with a 30-day funding period that ended on August 18, 2011, with nearly 900 backers, and pledges amounting to more than an order of magnitude greater than the $5000 goal. [1]