Rally Sport is a racing game for one or two players. The game is played from a third person perspective, is fully 3D modeled and features rudimentary physics and dynamic lighting effects.
Free Enterprise is a business simulator. You get to choose your factory and then hire a unique workforce to operate machinery and carry out the orders that you assign them all done by exchanging memos. You can produce up to 100 products in your factory and your goal is to be successful.
Jane's ATF: Advanced Tactical Fighters is a 1996 combat flight simulator developed and published by Electronic Arts for DOS. It is part of the Jane's Combat Simulations franchise. An expansion pack, NATO Fighters, was released in 1996. A compilation package, Advanced Tactical Fighters Gold, was released in 1997 for Microsoft Windows.
Oddballz is a spin-off from the Catz and Dogz series, from P.F. Magic.
This time, as the title states, the pets are wacky creatures, more alien-like than animal. Now they can make their eyes come out of their sockets and literally be scared to pieces, while retaining a comic look and feel (something impossible while dealing with Dogz or Catz).
The mechanics are pretty much the same in every game of the series, and here the player also gets to pet them, teach them tricks, punish them or just play around. The Oddballz will respond to each and every move and they can even morph into something else, depending on what the player does.
The tools the player can use are also very different from the ones in Dogz and Catz, and also have a wacky feel to them. There are tools like the Robo Pogo, the Gravitron, Seismo Ball, Transformer, Atomic Ball, and the delicious Liqui-Food, for feeding the pets.
The company also made additional Oddballz available for download from their site, to add to the starting lot of seven.
Take to the cliffs in this mountain climbing game for kids. Choose your equipment wisely before you climb each mountain. You can decide to take various climbing equipment, first aid stuff, and plenty to munch on. Choose your anchor points and where you climb up the face. Be sure to avoid falling rocks, snakes, and other hazards as you make your way up. Careful that you don't fall. There's also plenty of abandoned mines to speed through to hasten your journey to the top. You'll travel around the southwest to many different famous rock faces with progressing difficulty.
Command the Los Angeles nuclear powered attack submarine in missions around the world. Complete the missions objectives and preserve your command, or rest forever in Davy Jones' Locker. The entire arsenal of the 688i sub is at your command, from missiles to torpedoes, sonars to radars. You're up against mines, ships, subs, and more.
This game was a room decorating simulator with job minigames to pay for furniture.
It predates Animal Crossing by 5 years, and the game’s scenario writer was Kenji Terada, the scenario writer for Final Fantasy 1-3.
Earthsiege 2 is a mecha-style vehicle simulation game developed by Dynamix, produced by Frank Evers (NYPH), and released in 1996. Earthsiege 2 is set in the Earthsiege universe, which contains its predecessors Earthsiege (1994) and Battledrome (1995), as well as the action game Hunter Hunted (1996), strategy games MissionForce: CyberStorm (1997) and Cyberstorm 2: Corporate Wars (1998), simulation Starsiege (1999), and first-person shooters Starsiege: Tribes (1999), Tribes 2 (2001), Tribes Aerial Assault (2002), Tribes: Vengeance (2004) and Tribes: Ascend (2012).
As a simulation, Earthsiege 2 gives players the opportunity to pilot massive bipedal war machines known as HERCULANs (Humaniform-Emulation Roboticized Combat Unit with Leg-Articulated Navigation) (or 'HERCs' for short). Set in the 26th or 27th century, Earthsiege 2 features advanced weapons and technology for waging war. Earthsiege 2 takes place across North America, South America, Antarctica, Asia, Australia, Europe, and the moon.
Earthsiege 2 features a
TFX - Tactical Fighter Experiment (aka TFX) was one of the precursor combat flight simulators that helped to define the standards of modern combat flight simulators, together with Tornado, F14 Fleet Defender and the Falcon series. TFX was programmed by the British company Digital Image Design and published by Ocean Software in 1993.