The iPhone as the ultimate portable gaming platform - discuss. There have been a few minor gems since the iPhone 3G…
Dedicated to the authors of the original Boing! demo. Seymour Greene is a disillusioned employee of CBBM (Cute Beach Ball Manufacturers- arch-business rivals include IBBM and AppBall). No one there will listen to Seymour's great ideas. You must help Seymour snap out of his daydream. He has already been warned and this time he is sure to get fired. You must guide Seymour to the exit of his imaginary under-ground cave system. Watch out for the evil green Boing! balls for they like Seymour as a snack. Collect the red Boing! balls for points and use the scattered needles to pop the evil green Boing! balls. Maneuver Seymour up ladders, down slide-poles, and through teleporters. Watch out for falling rocks and flame-geysers. Boing! The Game has 30 levels with up to 24 screens for each level. Includes a Level Editor so you can make your own games. This package is sold by weight, not by volume. Packed as full as practicable by modern automatic equipment, it contains full net weight indicated. If it does not appear full when opened, it is because contents have settled during shipping and handling.
The iPhone as the ultimate portable gaming platform - discuss. There have been a few minor gems since the iPhone 3G…
Condoms. Seriously, that’s what the Boingz look like: jelly-filled condoms. I’m not sure that’s what Ninja Bee had…
Despite some early, Germanic hiccups, Spore seems to be going down quite well with both the reviewing and buying…
These are courtesy of the kids over at Pixelation's forums. Last year, they ran a little contest. See who could come…
Insert Credit has unearthed some patents from the early days of videogaming that are.. special.
Wow, somebody has been thinking hard about the iPhone user demographics and decided to knock a bit of laser-guided…
The world of Exergaming has seen a lot of development lately most notably with the Wii Fit.
Click to view Not sure to laugh or feel really, really nervous. The odd thing is that this doesn't seem to be an…
Sure. Why not? There's handhelds for all those fancy games with their graphics and tapping and analog nub control…
Tucked into Boing Boing's look at the timeline of fitness gaming controls is something called the "Atari Puffer." It…
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