Watch somebody post their Nuon collection now.
I have a fondness for the Game.Com. Most of the games are terrible, the screen is terrible, it’s slow, and they try their hardest to just self-destruct. Mine is an amalgamation of 3 broken ones.
Here’s an imgur link to my reviews of every game (except the elusive Wheel of Fortune 2), if you’re interested.
Tiger is one of those companies which would be interesting to read an inside story on.
It seems like their entire target demographic was disappointing gifts from distant relatives who might have heard you liked video games and/or whatever licensed tie-in they used.
Did they see that as their mission, and their goal to deliver the bare minimum? Or were they full of innovators being squished by cost-cutting management or some legacy expenses that forced them to continue to iterate on fixed-segment LCD displays and unbacklit smeary screens long past their time?