The 3-D Battles of Worldrunner
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The 3-D Battles of Worldrunner
Summary
The 3-D Battles of Worldrunner is a video game[1]. It has Wikipedia articles in 8 language editions, a strong signal of global cultural recognition.[2]
Key Facts
- The 3-D Battles of Worldrunner's instance of is recorded as video game[3].
- The 3-D Battles of Worldrunner's composer is recorded as Nobuo Uematsu[4].
- The 3-D Battles of Worldrunner was published by Square[5].
- The 3-D Battles of Worldrunner was published by Acclaim Entertainment[6].
- The 3-D Battles of Worldrunner's genre is third-person shooter[7].
- The 3-D Battles of Worldrunner's genre is platform game[8].
- The 3-D Battles of Worldrunner's genre is science fiction video game[9].
- The 3-D Battles of Worldrunner's developer is recorded as Square[10].
- The 3-D Battles of Worldrunner's designed by is recorded as Hironobu Sakaguchi[11].
- The 3-D Battles of Worldrunner's platform is recorded as Famicom Disk System[12].
- The 3-D Battles of Worldrunner's platform is recorded as Nintendo Entertainment System[13].
- The 3-D Battles of Worldrunner's game mode is recorded as single-player video game[14].
- The 3-D Battles of Worldrunner was distributed by disk card[15].
- The 3-D Battles of Worldrunner was distributed by ROM cartridge[16].
- The 3-D Battles of Worldrunner's country of origin is recorded as Japan[17].
- The 3-D Battles of Worldrunner was published on March 12, 1987[18].
- The 3-D Battles of Worldrunner's programmer is recorded as Nasir Gebelli[19].
- The 3-D Battles of Worldrunner's output device is recorded as Famicom 3D System[20].
Body
Authorship and Creation
Publishers include Square[5] and Acclaim Entertainment[6].
Publication
The 3-D Battles of Worldrunner was published on March 12, 1987[18]. Genres include third-person shooter[7], platform game[8], and science fiction video game[9]. Recorded distribution format include disk card[15] and ROM cartridge[16].
Why It Matters
The 3-D Battles of Worldrunner has Wikipedia articles in 8 language editions, a strong signal of global cultural recognition.[2] It is known by 8 alternative names across languages and contexts.[21]