- Samsung's U600 is one of the slimmest cell phones on the market, as of 2010. Containing a memory card slot that can add up to 2 GB of memory, the phone has an MP3 player and a 3.2-megapixel camera. The video function records MPEG-4 images and the 2.4-inch screen is large enough for gaming, which is Java-based.
- Mario is back, and this time he's trying to make it through the big city via a network of high-tension power lines. Using themes and characters made popular by the NES series, Mario encounters many of his old enemies and several of his classic friends along the way. A Java-based game, "Super Mario Planet" is only available on cell phone and has no arcade equivalent.
- A popular racing game, "4x4 Extreme Rally" has three game modes and 27 tracks, which travel across three different scenarios. Players get a choice of cars and have the ability to fine-tune each to their personal specifications, depending on the track. The game features an exciting music track and is Bluetooth capable, so you can challenge friends. This Java-based game is free to download, but does include advertising.
- "Crash Arena" is less of a racing game and more of a destroy-all-the-competition game. Players start by constructing a rolling wrecking ball from a junk heap. Career mode gives you the opportunity to earn more-advanced vehicles and access additional arenas. The game is playable against friends via Bluetooth and keeps a worldwide scoreboard so you can track your global dominance in this Java-based game.
- The "IA" at the end of "Dragon and Dracula: IA" stands for "Iceland Adventure." You control a brave little dragon as he seeks out the evil Dracula. Before you can battle him, you'll have to fight countless minions in this arcade-style, Java-based game. The game throws zombies, dark knights, bats and other flying beasts at you. Players earn dragon upgrades, and the final battle pits you against Dracula in a one-on-one battle to the end.
'Super Mario Planet'
'4x4 Extreme Rally'
'Crash Arena 3D'
'Dragon and Dracula: IA'
SHARE