Company name | Description | Games |
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Viper Games |
Jackal | |
Virgin Interactive Entertainment
Richard Branson expanded his Virgin business into computer games in the early 80s, initially concentrating on the ZX Spectrum. Within a few years they had an impressive roster of licenses, such as many Taito arcade games and UK publishing of Synergistic titles.
The company bought out Mastertronic in 1989, briefly using the name for reissues and Virgin Mastertronic for full-price titles.
In 1993 they became Virgin Interactive Entertainment, before eventually working with Electronic Arts. Ultimately they were bought by Titus as a subsidiary and the name Virgin Interactive Entertainment was used until April 2003.
The name was changed to Avalon Interactive in May 2003 and it was responsible for the European distribution of the group's games.
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Cool spot, Jungle Book, Aladdin, Scrabble - Deluxe Edition, Jimmy Whites - Whirlwind Snooker, M.C. Kids, Sport of Kings | |
Virtual Adventures Inc.
Virtual Adventures is an independent game development company based near Montreal in Canada and was established in 1994. Virtual Adventures is a familiar name for those who have played
MS-DOS/Windows95 video games in 90's. It has successfully developed two classic video games: "Start Quest I in the 27th century" and "Stellar Mercenaries" and is currently working on the development of "Star Quest 2: United Galaxies" which is a sequel to Star Quest I in the 27th century. Visit www.virtuadv.com for more information.
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Star Quest I in the 27th century | |
Vision Software |
ALF: World of Words, ALF's Thinking Skills, ALF's U.S. Geography, Seek and Destroy | |
Visionaires |
Gnome Alone | |
Visionary Media, Inc. |
Nerf Arena Blast | |
Visual Concepts Entertainment, Inc.
A developer of sports games founded in 1988 and based in California. Visual Concepts was bought by SEGA for US$ 10 million to develop exclusive sports games for their Dreamcast console, after Electronic Arts declined to support the platform with their popular EA Sports franchise (for which Visual Concepts had developed games before). These titles were released under the SEGA Sports label. In 2005, several years after support for the Dreamcast ended, the studio was sold to Take-Two Interactive, where it went on to form the core of 2K Sports.
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Star Trek - 25th Anniversary, Dominus, We're Back!: A Dinosaur's Story, Designasaurus II | |
Vivid Image |
First Samurai | |
Vladimír Chvátal |
Cervii | |
Vladimir Chvatil, Radim Krivanek |
Gamebox | |
Volume 11 Software |
Starball | |
Vorco Technologies |
Tamper | |
Wade L. Corby |
Battle Fleet | |
Wah-Software |
Alien Phobia | |
Walt Disney Computer Software, Inc.
Walt Disney Computer Software, Inc. was established in 1988 as a subsidiary of Walt Disney Consumer Products, a division of The Walt Disney Company. Headed by Shelley Miles, it became the first Walt Disney entity to focus exclusively on the internal development and publishing of computer and video games. The operation was shut down in 1996 and reorganized as Disney Interactive.
The company was an early pioneer in the video gaming industry, porting many games from arcade to home console systems, and developing its own games as well. Two of Sculptured Software's first in-house games were Ninja and Street Surfer.
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Mickey's 123: The Big Surprise Party, Mickey's ABC's: A Day at the Fair, Mickey's Jigsaw Puzzles, Mickey's Memory Challenge, Mickey's Runaway Zoo, Mickey's Space Adventure, Mickey's Colors And Shapes, The Chase on Tom Sawyer's Island | |
Warped Minds |
Carnage | |
Wave Software Ltd. |
Offensive | |
Webfoot Technologies, Inc. |
H2O, Bluppo, Chain Reaction | |
WelCom Systems |
Rockets | |
Wendell Hicken |
Scorched Earth | |