Games

Displaying 9681-9690 of 15808 results.
Amiga
Release Date: Unknown   |   Genre:
Peter Banning is an ordinary suburban dad with two kids - or so everyone thinks. What not even his family know is his past as Peter Pan, scourge of Captain Hook in JM Barrie's children's fiction. Captain Hook gains revenge on Banning by stealing his two children, so Peter must return to Neverland, return to eternal childhood, and get them back. It's a point and click adventure, and the pirate setting ensures that it recalls the Monkey Island games. The top 2/3 of the screen features a visual depiction of the area Peter is in, which a row of icons along the bottom can be selected to alter the function of a mouse click. These include looking at an object, picking it up, talking to people, using objects to solve problems (often in combination with others), and giving objects to others.
Sega Mega Drive
Release Date: July 10, 1992   |   Genre: Sports
Honoo no Toukyuuji Dodge Danpei (炎の闘球児ドッジ弾平) is a 1992 dodgeball game for the Sega Mega Drive and Sega Game Gear tying into TV Tokyo's Honoo no Toukyuuji Dodge Danpei anime.
PC
Release Date: September 16, 2003   |   Genre: Strategy
Homeworld 2 continues the struggle of the Hiigarans and their leader Karan S'jet. During the events of the original game, the Kushan race of the planet Kharak began a quest to discover and reclaim their home planet. The Kushan discovered the wreckage of the Khar-Toba, an interstellar transport, in a desert on Kharak, and inside found a galactic map etched on a piece of stone. From this the Kushan concluded they had been transplanted to Kharak some time ago. To reclaim their home planet—"Hiigara"— the Kushan built an enormous self-sufficient Mothership to carry 600,000 people on a crusade to reclaim Hiigara. This led to the engagement and eventual defeat of the Taiidan Empire which exiled them. The story continues that some time later, the Khar-Toba was found to contain one of the Three Hyperspace Cores, left behind by a so-called Progenitor race, which eventually allowed hyperspace travel. The First Core was possessed by the Bentusi: a powerful and enigmatic race of traders who assisted the Exiles (the campaign can be played using Kushan or Taiidan craft in the original game) during the first game. The third was lost until approximately one hundred years after the Exiles reclaimed Hiigara, found by a Vaygr Warlord named Makaan, who used it to conquer much of the galaxy and—as of the beginning of Homeworld 2—began attempts to capture Hiigara. The story states that religious beings of the galaxy consider the discovery of the Third Core to announce the End Times, during which Sajuuk, thought to be an immensely powerful being, will return. The game begins with the commissioning of a new Mothership, the Pride of Hiigara, similar in shape and design to the original Mothership and commanded by Karan S'jet, as in the original game. The ship is attacked by the Vaygr during the final stages of construction but escapes. The Bentusi inform the Hiigarans that they must find Balcora Gate, left behind by the Progenitors, behind which is something essential for stopping either the Vaygr threat, the End Times, or both. Makaan learns of and reaches the location as well, and the game's penultimate mission takes place on the other side of Balcora Gate, where Hiigarans and Vaygr alike discover an enormous Progenitor starship, named Sajuuk, with sockets for the Three Hyperspace Cores. After defeating Makaan the Hiigarans combine the Vaygr, Hiigaran and Bentusi Cores (recovered from the wreckage of the last of the Bentusi ships) within Sajuuk, and use it to defeat the leaderless-but-still-dangerous Vaygr invasion; Sajuuk is later found to be the key to a galaxy-wide network of hyperspace gates, ushering in a new age of trade and prosperity for all civilized races in the galaxy.
PC
Release Date: September 28, 1999   |   Genre: Strategy
Beneath the scorching sands of Kharak, the Kushan people have discovered the remains of a long-forgotten titanic spaceship. Buried within the ancient remains, the secret of their lost homeworld. For thousands of years, the Kushan have survived on the arid planet Kharak, corralled into the temperate geographical poles by a vast, unforgivingly hot desert. Scarcity of arable land and natural resources has coloured Kushan history with near constant inter-clan (or "Kiith") warfare. As new technologies emerged, religious and political conflict partially gave way to unified scientific exploration. DNA sequencing of Kharak's native life revealed no genetic resemblance to the Kushan, giving rise to their "XenoGenesis Theory" - which stated that they were not native to Kharak at all. The first space flights reinforced this idea. Small pieces of metallic debris, the largest no bigger than a hand, were retrieved from low orbit and, when analyzed, were found to be made up of materials totally unknown to Kushan metallurgy. In addition to helping accelerate their space technology research, the debris confirmed that a large advanced spacecraft had once been in orbit. It was an ironic twist of fate occurring later in their history that boosted them even further along their development. A high-powered satellite designed to scan the planetary system malfunctioned upon deployment and ended up facing entirely the wrong way, scanning the Great Desert around Kharak's equator instead. Despite this error, however, it found something, beneath the sands: a derelict city with a massive central metallic structure. An expedition discovered that the central structure was the spacecraft of which they had earlier found traces in orbit. It carried advanced spaceflight technologies including a Hyperspace Core, one of a few ancient machines that were the Homeworld setting's foundation for all faster-than-light technology. More importantly however, a stone with a galactic map bearing two coordinates was found. One was recognized as Kharak. The other bore a name so ancient it was common across all their languages and dialects: Hiigara. "Home". The stone would become known as the Guidestone, and confirmed the XenoGenesis Theory. Kharak's people united in building the "Mothership", a vast colony ship that would bear 600,000 of them to their destination, made rugged and self-sufficient in order to survive possible problems during the long trip. It is during the Mothership's final testing phase that the single-player game begins.
Nintendo 3DS
Release Date: October 17, 2013   |   Genre: Simulation
A Tale of Life, Love, and Friendship! Hometown Story takes you to a lush, green village tucked away in the countryside. The shop you inherited has brought you back to your hometown. However, the shop has become run down, and no one wants to even window shop there anymore. Can you turn the shop around and even expand it, or is it destined to stay in the red forever? You won't have to go it alone, though. You'll get help from a magical sprite named Pochica, who will help you get the store back up and running, and introduce you to all of the unique characters who reside in the town. The villagers will all change and grow throughout the game, and that person who you thought might be up to no good when you first met them just might have a heart of gold! Your experiences will be completely different from anyone else's. You'll never know what to expect in Hometown Story!
Microsoft Xbox One
Release Date: Unknown   |   Genre:
Homefront: The Revolution is set in 2029, two years after the events of Homefront and four years into the Greater Korean Republic's invasion of the United States. The GKR has lost the western states which also include Hawaii and Alaska to the Americans, following the Battle of San Francisco. However, the GKR has shifted their control to invade and capture many of the eastern states, with Philadelphia—the birthplace of America's independence—becoming their central base. The new Philadelphia is a heavily policed and oppressed environment, with civilians living in fear as the KPA patrol multiple districts in the city. In the city, a second rebellion is brewing and the resistance grows stronger, being led by protagonist Ethan Brady, but it will require more than strength alone to take down the technologically advanced GKR.[
Microsoft Xbox 360
Release Date: March 15, 2011   |   Genre: Shooter
Homefront takes place in this war-torn United States now occupied by the Korean People's Army. It begins in a version of Montrose, Colorado that more closely resembles Poland during World War II than a quaint western Colorado town. You step into the shoes of a pilot rescued from Unified Korean forces by The Resistance. They need your help in getting some very important goods out of Korean hands and delivering them to the US Army.
Xbox 360
Release Date: October 26, 2012   |   Genre: Kinect, Sports & Recreation
Step up to the plate and swing for the fence in Home Run Stars, featuring Avatar Fame Star! Progress through the League mode through all three unique stadiums! Each one features a vast number of spectacular targets to aim for and earn big points. Compete with your friends in multiplayer for the highest score. Use your device supported by SmartGlass to compete in a Duel with a friend!
Atari 2600
Release Date: January 1, 1978   |   Genre: Sports
The game can be played against the computer or with another player. You have the option to have 1, 2 or 3 players in the field. As a pitcher, you use the joystick to throw the ball and to control its speed and curve. After the ball is hit, your control all your men (they all move together since they follow the orders of a single joystick) in the field to catch the ball. As a batter, you can control the position of the baseball bat with the joystick. If you consider that your runners would make it to the next base, you can press the controller button so they stop at their current base. The rest of the rules are basically like real baseball. Each team has nine innings in a game. You are out after three strikes, your get to first base after four balls (balls that do not fly over Home) or if the pitcher hits you with a ball. In the field, you can put out a batter by catching his ball, then another runner by reaching his next base before him or simply by touching him between bases, thus completing a double play. The only way to accomplish a home run is by hitting the ball over second base without having it caught by the field players. You score a point for each runner that reaches Home base after each of the first three.
Super Nintendo (SNES)
Release Date: January 1, 1994   |   Genre: Action
Based off the hit sitcom, Tim "The Tool Man" Taylor's name has been put Binford's new line of power tools and he goes on a quest to retrieve the missing tools when he discovers that they are missing when he is about to present them on Tool Time. It is a race against time as you must collect various metal nuts to stay alive and collect a few wooden boxes of tool parts to proceed to the next part of the one of the four sound stages you are in. Defend yourself with your various common tools, take out weak walls and floors with your sledgehammer and jackhammer, and use your grappling tool to swing, lower, and raise yourself to distant areas.