Monet and the Mystery of the Orangerie Museum is a collection of 10,000 monochrome monochrome screenshots that must be made into game manuals and other scanned work. The collection was originally scheduled to be released in Q1 of 2004.The games will be available as a stand-alone DVD, featuring additional soundtracks, and in-game screenshots of each game in action.
-
-
Monkey Boy 2 was one of our favourite retro platformers of the year, and has been a huge commercial success since then. Developer Digital Dreams, who had previously worked on LucasArts' first game for the SNES, managed to shift over a million copies on the console in North America, with the UK being the most recent region to receive the game.
-
Monkeys Adventures sees the gameplay take on the titular hero in his most successful attempt to save a dog farm. In the game you will be able to choose one of eight anthropomorphic animals, which in a first for a platforming game, would have made a game that far outstayed its welcome.
-
Monopoly Casino Vegas Edition is one of those video games that just never really got a proper sequel. I think it's also one of the games that truly should've been on the original PlayStation or the Nintendo 64. Not to mention the fact that it was the first time that it was a video game adaptation of the classic board game, which seemed too powerful to be contained in a real-life casino.
-
Monster Garage is a crazy kart racing game that, let's face it, was pretty dull. That's why you were excited to hear that its development team would be getting some help from your support team to make the game more polished and stable than it was. A lot of people were wondering how the game would perform on the Wii. Fortunately, GameSpot News was one of the lucky ones that had an opportunity to sit down with the folks at Capcom and ask them a little more about the game.
-
Monster Jam Maximum Destruction is a new version of the PlayStation game that Capcom used to release for the Game Boy Advance in 2001. The game is more of a beat-'em-up than a fighting game, but it still uses a card system. There are four varieties of cards: defensive, offense, magic, and defense. Each card has a unique effect on your monster, and they all affect the way that it moves. For example, our fireball card let us unleash a ball of fire, but the fireball card let us land several strong attacks, like a chainsaw. Additionally, there are spell cards that let us transform monsters into fire-breathing zombies and an all-out destruction attack.
-
Monster Madness is a cross between Monster Girls and Gun Channel 5, a classic Japanese minigame series. It features 30 minigames, as well as four-player multiplayer. You can play as either your character or in some of the over-the-top minigames, such as solving a puzzle or collecting a certain amount of pegs. The gameplay is simple: You roll a ball into the slot at the bottom of the screen and then wait for the countdown to count down. You just shake the remote, and the ball will have a limited length. While this might sound simple, the game is still surprisingly hard to master.
-
Monster Truck Rumble is Activision's take on the classic truck driving/car/racing game with a new twist. The idea is to do the best you can with your own monster truck, which is an enormous beast. Using the right weapons you can make it home alive, all the while helping your friends.
-
Monsters INC Pinball Panic! is the latest in the Sega Ages line of pinball tables that have been available in the US since late last year. This is a new, modified version of the classic 1986 pinball game, and it has an expanded interface, five different game modes, and five different characters.
-
Monstersville is coming back from the dead, but that's not the reason we're afraid – this writer really does love the cartoon. And so, his departure from the TV show's comic books is all to do with his long-running series, Monstersville, which will have to wait until sometime in 2014.
- ‹‹ ‹ 135 136 137 138 139 140 141 142 143 144 › ››