The object of the game is fairly simple, move your ship to Avoid the Roids. Ever so often you will have to avoid an additional Roid. Destroy Roids by having them crash into the sweepers.
Distributed freely to students, Surf 'm Up is a little Kaboom!-inspired game by Dutch beer brewer Dommelsch.
The premise is simple: four cranes of a beer tender are spilling droplets and you, an empty beer glass, must collect each droplet. Controlled by keyboard or mouse, the game is a test of reflexes. Each collected droplet gives 5 points; 45 points will get you to the next section; after three sections you will progress to the next increasingly harder level.
Missing too many droplets will cause the beer glass to slip. Watch out for falling sugar cubes, peanuts, matchsticks and darts - you can only withstand them three times. Also beware of a little green caterpillar who tries to hinder your progress in all manners possible. Help comes in the form of a bell announcing 'happy hour'-mode - making your beer glass invulnerable for a couple of seconds. Another help is a sponge appearing from time to time. Jumping on it cleans all spilled droplets.
Users were encouraged to save their highscores on a blank disk and
Timon and Pumbaa's Jungle Pinball brings the popular Lion King characters Timon and Pumbaa into a pinball game. Those two, and many other jungle animals, take an active part in the action as you play. Hear the voices of Timon and Pumbaa plus cheery music and zany sound effects.
After the three Atari 2600 Action Packs Activision took the next step and brought out an emulation package featuring the Commodore 64 with 15 games:
Alcazar: The Forgotten Fortress
Beamrider
Eliminator
Hacker
Little Computer People
Portal
Toy Bizarre
Rock n' Bolt
Park Patrol
Master of the Lamps
The Activision Decathlon
The Great American Cross-Country Road Race
Web Dimension
Zenji
Zone Ranger
WinDepth is a Windows game developed by the Japanese freeware group Bio_100%. It’s an arrangement of the 1992 shooting game SuperDepth (originally for PC-9801) for Windows.
In WinDepth, players control a warship moving on the water’s surface while countless submarines lurk underwater. The objective is to destroy the submarines while avoiding their torpedoes and mines.
Whac-a-Mole is coming to your copy of Microsoft Windows! Watch in wonder as your mild-mannered mouse is transformed into the proverbial blunt object. Slam the enormous hammer down with a click of the mouse as you prowl the mole-infested landscape. Grit your teeth, take aim and BOP moles in a split second as they jump and taunt you to take your best shot! Roar as you score a direct hit, triggering a chorus of cartoon sound effects and hilarious animation! Unlike passive screen savers or intellectual adventures, Whac-a-Mole delivers pure entertainment as you absent-mindedly BASH devilish rodents.
Dodger is a game in the style of Pac-Man. In Pac-Man the player has to eat all the dots from the board in order to pass to the next level. In this game the dots are replaced by fruits (apple, strawberry and cherry) that the player has to eat in order to get a score and to go to the next level. The enemies are four mean laser machines in the sides of the levels and they attack the player by shooting lasers. When the character is hit, a life is lost. Unlike Pac-Man there are no special pills in the game. The board also contains skulls and they also make the character lose a life upon contact. After every level a password is provided to continue playing from that level immediately.
In Squirmer The Game you take control of a space ship in order to kill a centipede. Shooting at the head or tail of the centipede will shrink it while shooting in between will split into 2 centipedes.
Like the name suggests, Breakout 3000 is a Breakout game. So you have a screen filled with bricks, a ball and a paddle. Destroy all bricks with the ball. Use the paddle to bounce the ball back into the playfield when it's about to leave the screen.
The game offers 23 levels to play. The more levels you play, the faster will be the game, but also the more special bricks you encounter (exploding bricks, which destroys adjacent bricks; extra lives; etc.) and the more different background themes you will see.
Warheads for Windows is a clone of Atari's popular 1980 arcade game, Missile Command. Originally it was pretty much a straight rip-off of the classic "intercept the falling missles" game, where you had two missile launchers (instead of three) that you could use to shoot down incoming missiles (the left and right mouse buttons fire from the left and right missile launchers, respectively) to prevent them from destroying six cities below. The missile launchers have a finite number of missiles and can be destroyed by missiles. You earn points for shooting down missiles, nukes and airplanes, and for each city that survives each round, which can earn bonus cities which replace destroyed cities.
When you have no cities left, the game is over. Version 2.0 added sound card support; a large number of configurable options; a display of how many missiles each launcher has remaining; branching missiles (MIRVs), and "blossoming" explosions, in which the destroyed missiles blow up and can destroy the other missiles, causing a ch