3 kills - The Foot ninja spy radar
4 kills - RC Skateboard with C4
5 kills - Pizza-box bombs falling from the sky
6 kills - Ninja death stars
10 kills - Turtle Van with 2 mounted machine gun turrets
17 kills - The Foot soldier army
etc etc
Call of Duty publisher signs worldwide, multiyear deal with Nickelodeon to develop and publish games inspired by new CG-animated series.
Nickelodeon and Activision today announced a new worldwide, multiyear deal that will see the Call of Duty company develop and publish at least three Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles games inspired by the animated series.
As part of the agreement, Activision has secured the global game rights to TMNT. The first game is due out this summer for unspecified platforms.
That Activision is picking up the TMNT franchise is not a total surprise, as the company was last year rumored to be a licensing partner for the franchise.
Activision is the third gaming publisher to try its hand at a Ninja Turtles game. Konami was the brand's first and longest-running publishing partner, with a string of games lasting from the Turtles' NES and arcade games of 1989 to 2005's Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles 3: Mutant Nightmare. Ubisoft took over the franchise in 2007, starting with tie-ins for the computer-animated feature film TMNT, and it produced a handful of titles during the following two years.
Nickelodeon's new Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles series debuted in September, drawing nearly 12 million viewers during its first weekend. The show explores the brotherhood of four teenage turtles (Donatello, Michelangelo, Leonardo, and Raphael) and their quest to understand the mystery of their existence.
The show airs Saturday mornings on Nickelodeon.
Users who looked at this article also looked at these content items.
United States Vice President Joe Biden believes there is no legal restriction on ability to tax violent media. Full Story
Avalanche Studios co-founder says developer's ambition is for action, not moments that make players cry; steampunk-style game on hold. Full Story
Developer confirms image suggesting version of upcoming shared-world shooter in development for Sony's latest portable is a fake. Full Story
Assassin's Creed and Far Cry publisher says its network of 26 studios and over 7,000 developers will allow company to ship major franchises more regularly. Full Story
4A Games creative director Andrew Prokhorov thanks Jason Rubin for telling the studio's story, but says, "We deserve the ratings we get." Full Story
DICE head would also like to poach top talent from rivals Infinity Ward and Treyarch. Full Story
Future EA games won't require Online Passes; the service is being scrapped after tepid player response. Full Story