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InitialsDiceBearhttps://github.com/dicebear/dicebearhttps://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/„Initials” (https://github.com/dicebear/dicebear) by „DiceBear”, licensed under „CC0 1.0” (https://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/)JA
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Türk Ünlüler @lemm.ee

Buket Aydın

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İrem Derici

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İrem Derici

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İrem Derici

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Meriç Aral

  • Shaq Fu is a 2D fighting game published by Electronic Arts for the Sega Genesis and Super NES on October 28, 1994. It was developed by Delphine Software International.

    Versions for the Game Gear, Game Boy, and Amiga followed in 1995. 

    While en route to a charity game in Tokyo, basketball star Shaquille O'Neal (called "Shaq" for short) is drawn into an alternate dimension by a local man who believes only Shaq can save his grandson. Once there, he must fight a succession of 11 opponents, one at a time, with gameplay resembling Street Fighter II or Mortal Kombat.

  • Retro Gaming Gallery @lemm.ee

    Shaq-Fu (1994, Sega Mega Drive, Electronic Arts)

  • Virtuoso is a third-person shooter video game developed by MotiveTime and originally published by Nova Spring and Elite Systems in North America and Europe, respectively, for DOS in 1994.

    Virtuoso is a game where the player is a rock musician in the year 2055, who spends his time battling in Virtual Reality.

  • Retro Gaming Gallery @lemm.ee

    Virtuoso (1995, 3DO, Elite Systems)

  • Surround is a video game programmed by Alan Miller and published by Atari, Inc. for the Atari Video Computer System (Atari VCS).

    The game plays similarly to the arcade game Blockade (1976), which allows players to navigate a continuously moving block around an enclosed space as a wall trails behind it. Every time the opposite player has their brick hit a wall, the opposing player earns a single point, with the winner being the first to collect ten points.

  • Retro Gaming Gallery @lemm.ee

    Surround (1977, Atari 2600, Atari)

  • Ninja Hattori-kun is a 1986 video game software developed and published by Hudson Soft for the Nintendo Family Computer exclusively in Japan.

    Players take on the role of the young ninja by the name of Kanzo Hattori who is out training to impress his master.

    The game features four difficulty levels of 16 side-scrolling areas that have to be completed within a time limit. Hattori has the ability to jump and throw shurikens. He can also collect scrolls that allow him to use up to eleven different ninja techniques. Hattori can get touched up to nine times by most enemy ninjas before dying. However some enemies can kill Hattori in one hit. Projectiles thrown from enemies that hit Hattori typically just stun him.

  • Nightshade is an action video game developed and published by Ultimate Play the Game. It was first released for the ZX Spectrum in 1985, and was then ported to the Amstrad CPC and BBC Micro later that year. It was also ported to the MSX exclusively in Japan in 1986.

    In the game, the player assumes the role of a knight who sets out to destroy four demons in a plague-infested village.

  • Mysterium is a first person dungeon crawl game developed by Maxis and published by Asmik Ace Entertainment in February 1991 for the Nintendo Game Boy.

    A giant ant encourages you to brave a huge maze, defeat a dragon, and free a fellow Alchemist with the power of Alchemy in this interesting game.

  • Black Tiger, known in Japan as Black Dragon (Japanese: ブラックドラゴン, Hepburn: Burakku Doragon), is a hack-and-slash platform released for arcades by Capcom in 1987.

    The Japanese version has a few changes that makes it more challenging than its American counterpart:

    Several of the "falling rock" obstacles are added.

    The prices of many items are higher.

    More points are needed to increase maximum vitality.

    It is not possible to avoid taking damage from bosses by crouching under them.