Lisa is going to babysit twins and is looking forward for an evening of watching TV while the kids are asleep. But she is about to find out that this particular babysitting job is no easy money!
Reggie and Ashley are on their way to surprise the campfire girls when an accident strands them deep in the middle of nowhere. When Reggie wakes up from the blackout, she realizes Ashley is gone and the only sign of life is a small light emanating from a mysterious mansion.
Flash Flash Revolution (or FFR) is a music-based rhythm game that runs through an Adobe Air desktop application, making it a fully-fledged online music title that requires no fees to play. Players can choose from well over 2,000 songs from a number of genres, produced by popular signed and independent artists. Each game level has a pattern of arrows which correlate to the current song being played. The pattern of arrows scrolls from the bottom of the play field (by default) and players must hit the arrows when they meet the stationary receptors located at the top of the play field.
Puzzle Dungeon is a Sokoban game for iOS combining nostalgic gameplay and graphics with modern controls, UI and concepts such as online leader-boards. It was created by Robert Lane
In 1998 Wemade Entertainment released their first game under the Mir franchise, sadly no one outside of South Korea and China got opportunity to play. The project was abandoned very shortly after it's release and that's where it stayed until now.
Over the years screenshots were shared around old forums and little was known of the game that so little people managed to play or own.
Pirate Hunter is a classic representative of the First Person Shooter (FPS) genre, using an original graphics engine DIOsoft Engine. The game was inspired by Far Cry.
Music Master Chopin is a rhythm/music game similar to Guitar Hero and Rock Band, only centered around the music of Frédéric Chopin and his contemporaries.
Palette is a Japanese language freeware adventure game that was made with RPG Maker 95 by Nishida Yoshitaka. The game was highly acclaimed in the Fourth ASCII Entertainment Software Contest, awarded a Grand Prix of 10,000,000 yen, which resulted in remaking the game for PlayStation by Enterbrain. That version, entitled Forget me not -Palette-, saw the release on April 26, 2001 exclusively in Japan.