![]() Awake Baby - Navigate the babies out of the way so the highlighted baby can pass through.Animal Pool - Hit the incoming animals with your dodgeball.Two characters on the title screen are named "DICK" and "KUM", which is possibly an intended suggestive innuendo.An alternate revision features people and is literally titled Track & Field. 100m Dash - Clone of an event from Track & Field, featuring cats and dogs.VT-based Games Original Games (VT03-09/UM6578) Spin Ball - Similar to Pinball Track, but without any holes.Numerous VT09 hacks of it were created, including Gear Race, Racing Boat, Road Bumper, Speedy Way X, and Truck Race. Pinball Track - Move the marble through the track without it falling into the holes.Ocean Quest - A side-scrolling racing game.Two VT09 hacks of the game exist - VR Racing and Bump Lorry Race. ![]() ![]() Motor Rally - A pseudo-3D racing game similar to Pole Position.Insect Chase - Catch the butterflies into your net.Birdie Nest - Catch the bird's eggs into your hands while avoiding touching its poop or letting it go off-screen.Bingo Zap - Maneuver the marble into the hole.There is an alternate UM6578 version (produced by the "unknown developer") called Alien Attack. This release is the only major VT02 production by JungleTac (excluding those from the unknown affiliated developer). The Tiltboy is an uncommon plug & play where the controller is physically rotated to control movement. This is evidenced by many "generic" variations of the games retaining various Disney assets - sometimes not changing any graphics at all. The Sunplus games seem to have first appeared on a rare series of Disney-licensed handhelds known as Disney Game It!. This library is mostly different from the VT titles, although there are still a few carry-overs. Sometime between the Famiclone-based releases, proprietary 16 and 32-bit titles were developed by JungleTac for both Sunplus and Game Boy Advance hardware. It is unknown what this company is actually called, and they are known to just be credited as "JungleTac" on certain releases despite seemingly not being JungleTac itself. There is an unknown development company affiliated with JungleTac, who has produced both variations of JungleTac games and otherwise-original titles. Games marked with an asterisk (*) are confirmed to be the original name others may be incorrect. ![]() This leads to many multicarts using the wrong names for games in the menu. While this seems to have been to save space in some cases, other times it was ultimately pointless. These games are rather difficult to document, due to only releasing in certain parts of Europe - but they all appear to be hacks of already existing titles and nothing fully original.Īt some point, many of the title screens for their games were hacked out, or in some cases never existed to begin with. One of JungleTac's distributors, Lexibook, frequently altered games from their VT3xx library to feature licenses such as Spider-Man and Frozen. Very few standard VT02 games were released by JungleTac, though there are a handful of exceptions to this. Many new VT3xx titles were developed, in addition to upgrading most (if not all) of the VT09 library. In the late 2000s, development shifted to VT3xx hardware (either VT368, VT369 or VT389). After the UM6578 chip was retired, hardware was moved to VT09 (and occasionally VT03) a few of the earlier games were converted for these formats, but their music (and in some cases, gameplay) was significantly downgraded. They ran on the rather uncommon UM6578 NES-on-a-chip, and their library was a mixture of hacks and originals. The first set of JungleTac games were released around 2001.
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |
AuthorWrite something about yourself. No need to be fancy, just an overview. ArchivesCategories |