Koolah is an English spelling of the Finnish word 'kuula' meaning the 'metal ball', that can't be squeezed and is used in the game as main protagonist.
The game's idea was taken from a children's board game, where one tries to guide a metal ball through a wooden maze without touching the ball. The ball is controlled with two knobs on the side of the maze. One of the knobs leans the maze horizontally and the other vertically. The route through the maze is drawn on it, but there are holes along the route that easily swallow the ball.
Hextris is a falling block puzzle game just like Tetris, except with hexagons instead of squares. One point is awarded for each piece placed, and 25+ (current level) points are awarded for each line eliminated.
WWF Superstars is a licensed wrestling game. Players can choose between five WWF superstars: Ultimate Warrior, Hulk Hogan, Macho King Randy Savage, Mr. Perfect and the Million Dollar Man to take on opponents in the ring.
There are many moves that can be executed by all the wrestlers: body slam, suplex, clothes line, and others. In addition, there are signature moves unique to each superstar. Two players can compete against each other via the Game Boy Gamelink.
Super Tetris is a Tetris variant. It contains additional features such as different types of gameplay (two player cooperative and competitive) as well as new block types (lightning bolts that eliminate an entire row, and bombs that eliminate from 2 to 16 blocks). The Moscow Circus in shown in the background.
On the way trying to get round the world in 80 days, Mr Phileas Fogg has stopped to help the Allies against the enemy. To help, Phileas is going up in the air in his hot-air balloon and mapping the enemy territory as well as locating and bombing enemy shacks. Using High Pressure Thrust, the winds, hydrogen gas, and sandbags, Phileas can adjust his height and direction to map and bomb enemy shacks as well as avoiding obstacles and Musketeers firing cannons and muskets. The longer the day goes on and gets warmer the balloon rises and falls quicker.
Slightly Magic is a platform game not unlike Codemasters' own Dizzy and Seymour series, but is generally shorter and easier than most other games of that genre.
In addition to standard inventory puzzles of Dizzy games, Slightly Magic introduces a magic system that requires multiple objects to be combined in order to achieve effects ranging from frightening the enemies to turning the player into a fish.
Tristan is the first digital pinball game made by Japanese developer LittleWing, released in 1991. It has a light fantasy theme (dragons, swords, etc.).
Neverwinter Nights is a computer game released in 1991. It was developed by Stormfront Studios and published by Strategic Simulations, Inc. and ran on MS-DOS. It was the first multiplayer online role-playing game to display graphics, and was hosted on AOL.
Neverwinter Nights was developed with gameplay similar to other games in the Gold Box series. Players begin by creating a character. After creating the character, gameplay takes place on a screen that displays text interactions, the names and current status of one's party of characters, and a window which displays images of geography marked with various pictures of characters or events. When combat occurs, gameplay switches to full-screen combat mode, in which a player's characters and enemies are represented by icons which move around in the course of battle.
Situated in the city of Neverwinter and more than twenty surrounding regions/areas, the game itself was similar to other official AD&D Forgotten Realms games of its time. As it was an online game, it had
Peggle is an arcade game where a ball-like character falls from the top of the screen and the player's task is to make him hit as many pegs as possible before landing in one of the cups at the bottom. The game is played with a single controller which is used to both rotate the pegs and move the cups left and right. The aim of the game is simply to clear all pegs in each level which happens when they are touched by the ball. Pegs of certain colours require multiple hits but are also worth more points. The cups at the bottom have different properties. Some of them give bonuses in terms of extra time or points while others cause the ball to bounce back up to the pegs again.
Cosmic Cop, known in Japan as Armed Police Unit Gallop, is a shooter arcade game developed and released by Irem in 1991, running upon the Irem M-84 arcade board. While not directly based on the R-Type series, it is considered a spin-off of such, with many features being adapted into later games, notably R-Type Final.
Game bundle, mainly from Dinamic games
01. Fernando Martín Basket Master
02. Aspar G.P. Master
03. Choy-Lee-Fut Kung-Fu Warrior
04. Míchel Fútbol Master - + Super Skills
05. Simulador Profesional de Tenis
Get it all together with the Personal Organizer! A phone book, a day planner, and a calendar all in one. Store up to 90 names and phone numbers.
Keep track of appointments and events with the built-in day planner, and find dates up until the year 2000 with the built-in calendar.
Also featured is a complete listing of the most often used 800 numbers, a world clock with over 75 cities, a fully functioning calculator and a notepad.
A game where you play darts against 7 wacky opponents with their own look and style. There are various different game modes such as Round the Clock, 180 and Tournament.
Kentris is a Freeware Tetris clone made by build engine creator Ken Silverman. As usual for a Tetris game, you rotate and move falling blocks of various shapes so as to arrange them into complete lines without gaps. A few amusing sound effects are added by Silverman.
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