texas holdem players

MobyGames texas holdem players is a website devoted to cataloging video game and computer games, both past and present. The site contains an extensive database of video game information. The websites goal is defined as the following by the websites FAQ: "To meticulously catalog all relevant information texas holdem players texas holdem players about electronic games on a game-by-game basis, and then offer up that information through flexible queries and "data mining". In laymans terms,

its a huge game database." At the time of this writing , that catalog includes more than 50 separate gaming platforms and more than 20,000 unique games.MobyGames is built on a "quality over quantity" framework, and the given reason for many games being absent from the website is that no users have contributed valid and suitable information for them yet.OverviewMobyGames database is completely relational database meaning that information can be searched for in a variety of ways.

The database contains information on video and computer texas holdem players games, video game developers and video game publisher and categorizes them by year, manufacturer and platform. Many, but not yet all games released for the Amiga, Atari ST, Apple II, Commodore 64, the IBM PC compatible . Therefore a game such as Tom Clancys Splinter Cell, released for 3D-capable platforms will be separated from Splinter Cell as it texas holdem players appears on the Game Boy Advance or N-Gage.Content to MobyGames is added on a voluntary basis. The ideas are

similar to a wiki, though not identical. Anonymous contributions are not allowed, each item is texas holdem players tracked to a user texas holdem players account for auditing purposes. Furthermore, all information submitted to MobyGames is individually verified by users with Approver access before it goes into the texas holdem players database. User accounts are free and require only a valid email address.MobyGames also maintains a comprehensive list of developers, such as game programmer

game designers and artists. This list is garnered from the credit information for games in their database. Some developer "rap sheets" have biography information. This is not entirely dissimilar from how IMDB tracks credits for various movie actors and crew.Almost all information on a game is included in MobyGames. Each entry can include a summary, credits, release texas holdem players information, cover art scans, screenshots, reviews , technical specifications for the game, trivia, tips & tricks , advertising blurbs the game may have used, and

links for buying or trading the game. MobyGames does not have any downloadable games, demos or patches, feeling those roles are better left up to the developers. They also do not carry game news as there are many other web sites devoted to that task.One of Mobygames signature texas holdem players features is that it allows its users to rate their favorite games. The top rated games are then featured in a series of lists sorted by genre, system, year, etc. There is also a list for The 25 Greatest Games of All Time.HistoryMobyGames was founded on March 1, texas holdem players 1999 by Jim

Leonard, Brian Hirt and David Berk , three friends since high school. Leonard had the idea of sharing information about electronic games with a larger audience. Out of that desire came MobyGames.MobyGames began with just entries for DOS and Windows games, since those were the only systems the founders were familiar with. On its second birthday, MobyGames started supporting other platforms,

such as the PlayStation, the Apple II and even Linux and the ancient Vectrex. Currently, only a few systems are not supported by MobyGames, among them Apple Macintosh and the Atari 8-bit family. texas holdem players According to David Berk, new platforms are added once there is enough information researched to design the necessary framework for them in the database, as well as people willing to be approvers for the new platform.See also: Killer List of VideogamesExternal links The MobyGames FAQ Oldskool.org, Jim Leonards website "dedicated to old PC gaming-related nostalgia and resources."Online databasesComputer and video game websites