Werewolf: The Apocalypse was a video game that was in development at Capcom's Western development studio around 1995-1996, with plans to release the game on the original Sony PlayStation and the SEGA Saturn. Based on the world of White Wolf's roleplaying game Werewolf: The Apocalypse, WTA was a 3D brawler with an overhead isometric-style perspective. Players could choose one of seven characters, including characters from the tabletop game like Mari Cabrah, and do battle with typical Werewolf foes like Fomori, Black Spiral Dancers and Banes. The game was never finished, and only an early and very rough prototype has ever been seen publicly.
Winter Heat is a sports video game developed by Sega AM3 and published by Sega for arcades in 1997, and for the Sega Saturn in 1998, featuring the license for the 1998 Winter Olympics that were celebrated in Nagano, Japan. It is the sequel to the 1996 Sega game DecAthlete.
WWF WrestleMania is a professional wrestling arcade game released by Midway Manufacturing Co. in 1995. It is based on the World Wrestling Federation professional wrestling promotion.
The XaviXPORT, sold as the Domyos Interactive System in Europe in Decathlon stores, is a fitness-based home video game console developed by Japanese company SSD Company Limited and released in the United States in 2004 during the sixth generation of video game consoles. The console uses cartridges and wireless controllers. The controllers are shaped like sports equipment (such as baseball bats or tennis rackets), with users' actions represented on the television screen through the use of sensors in the controllers. The manufacturer's suggested retail price for the XaviXPORT was USD $79.99 at launch. However, the system has been officially sold as low as $19.99 bundled with tennis or bowling in their 2013 Spring Cleaning sale. In 2013, Xavix's social media sites went silent, but the ecommerce site remained up until 2017 when the official domain expired