Scribblenauts (video Game)
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Scribblenauts (video Game)
''Scribblenauts'' is an emergent gameplay, emergent puzzle video game, puzzle action game, action video game developed by 5th Cell and published by Warner Bros. Interactive Entertainment for the Nintendo DS. The game was released in 2009 in all regions except Japan, and in 2011 in Japan as by Konami. It is the third Nintendo DS video game made by 5th Cell, the first two being ''Drawn to Life'' and ''Lock's Quest''. The objective of ''Scribblenauts'', as implied by its catchphrase "Write Anything, Solve Everything", is to complete puzzles to collect "Starites", helped by the player's ability to summon any object (from a database of tens of thousands) by writing its name on the touchscreen. The game is considered by its developers to help promote emergent gameplay by challenging the player to solve its puzzles within certain limitations or through multiple solutions. Jeremiah Slaczka, creator and director of ''Scribblenauts'', envisioned the game as a combination of solving life s ...
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5th Cell
5th Cell is an independently owned video game developer founded in 2003 as 5th Cell Media, LLC. led by Jeremiah Slaczka and Marius Falhbusch. The company is most well known for creating the '' Drawn to Life'' and ''Scribblenauts'' series. Overview Founded on August 28, 2003 by Joseph M. Tringali, Jeremiah Slaczka and Brett Caird, the company started out developing mobile games working with such publishers as THQ Wireless, JAMDAT Mobile (now EA Mobile) and UIEvolution (a former subsidiary of Square Enix). On August 2, 2004, THQ Wireless announced it would publish 5th Cell's first three original mobile games: ''Siege'', ''SEAL Team 6'' and ''Mini Poccha''. In 2006, 5th Cell transitioned into Nintendo DS and casual game development. While they have worked with licenses and work for hire in the past, the core focus has moved completely onto building innovative, original video games. In an IGN interview with Michael Thomsen, Jeremiah Slaczka, the company's creative director, was ask ...
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Lock's Quest
''Lock's Quest'' is a real-time strategy tower defense video game developed by 5th Cell and published by THQ. It is 5th Cell's second Nintendo DS game. It was released in North America on September 8, 2008, in Europe on September 26, 2008 and in Australia on September 25, 2008. On January 6, 2017, the German game ratings board Unterhaltungssoftware Selbstkontrolle (USK) rated ''Lock's Quest'' for PlayStation 4, Xbox One, and PC which indicated that the publisher was developing a port for the game. and on 16 February 2017, THQ Nordic officially announced that they were developing a remaster for ''Lock's Quest'' scheduled for May 2017 for PlayStation 4, Xbox One and PC with development by Digital Continue. Gameplay ''Lock's Quest'' is a real-time strategy game, incorporating tower defense gameplay elements. The battlefield, viewed from an Isometric projection, isometric perspective, is displayed on the DS's bottom screen. Combat is divided into two phases, Build and Battle. During ...
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D-pad
A D-pad (short for directional pad or digital pad; officially referred to by Nintendo as a +Control Pad) is a flat, usually thumb-operated, often digital, four-way directional control with one button on each point, found on nearly all modern video game console gamepads, game controllers, on the remote control units of some television and DVD players, and smart phones. Like early video game joysticks, the vast majority of D-pads are digital; in other words, only the directions provided on the D-pad buttons can be used, with no intermediate values. However, combinations of two directions (up and left, for example) do provide diagonals and many modern D-pads can be used to provide eight-directional input if appropriate. Although D-pads offer less flexibility than analog sticks, they can easily be manipulated (requiring little movement of the thumb) with very high accuracy. They are also far less demanding in maintenance and do not protrude very far from the controller, making them ...
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Side-scrolling Video Game
'' A side-scrolling video game (alternatively side-scroller), is a game viewed from a side-view camera angle where the screen follows the player as they move left or right. The jump from single-screen or flip-screen graphics to scrolling graphics during the golden age of arcade games was a pivotal leap in game design, comparable to the move to 3D graphics during the fifth generation.IGN Presents the History of SEGA: Coming Home
Hardware support of smooth scrolling backgrounds is built into many games and some game consoles and home computers, including
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Scribblenauts Screenshot
''Scribblenauts'' is a series of action puzzle video games primarily developed by 5th Cell. The series is owned and published by Warner Bros. Interactive Entertainment. The first game in the series was titled ''Scribblenauts'' and was first released on September 15, 2009, in North America, exclusively on the Nintendo DS. Since the release of the first game, five other ''Scribblenauts'' games have been released, in addition to two compilations and two comic adaptations. The ''Scribblenauts'' series primarily sees the player as Maxwell, a boy who has a magical notebook that summons anything he writes in it. Players are tasked with solving puzzles by summoning different items and creatures using the notebook, leading to emergent gameplay elements. The sixth and latest installment in the series, ''Scribblenauts Showdown'', has significantly different gameplay than other entries, with it being more of a party game, rather than an action puzzle game. Critical reception of the series ...
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