Filed under: ScreensIf the Homie Rollerz short that we posted yesterday piqued your curiosity about the game, you might want to check out some screens for it -- after all, that video yesterday didn't show us anything about the actual game. We couldn't help but poke some fun at it (making some alterations to the screenshot on the right), even though Homie Rollerz is clearly aiming to be silly. You can even race as an alien or some guy that looks like a jester ghost, which we suppose is somethin
Dana Dominiak (CEO, President), Pascal Pochol (Dir Engineering)
Industry
Computer and video game industry
Products
Dragon Ball Z: The Legacy of Goku Hello Kitty: Happy Party Pals
Revenue
n/a
Employees
19
Website
Homepage
Webfoot Technologies is a developer of computer games. Titles released include "Hello Kitty: Happy Party Pals" and "Dragon Ball Z: The Legacy of Goku" for the Nintendo Game Boy Advance.
Webfoot Technologies, Inc. is a developer of video games for various platforms. Webfoot is probably best known for its series of Dragonball Z games for the Nintendo Game Boy Advance which were published by Atari. This includes the best selling Dragon Ball Z: The Legacy of Goku series of RPG games for the Game Boy Advance. Recently, the company has created other games based on popular licenses including Hello Kitty, Fear Factor, and Phil Mickelson Golf.
The company was founded during the early days of the internet by Dana Dominiak and Pascal Pochol. The original catalog of titles included mostly DOS-based games, but they later expanded to Microsoft Windows software and eventually Apple Macintosh, Palm Pilot, PocketPC, and console platforms including the Nintendo Game Boy Advance and Nintendo DS. Webfoot's earliest Windows title was probably the cult classic "DROD: Deadly Rooms of Death" programmed by Erik Hermansen. Several of Webfoot's budget products became popular in the late 90's with best-sellers such as 3D Frog Frenzy, 3D Pinball Express, Super Huey III, and Mahjong Ultimate.
Webfoot got its name in the early 90's several year before the World Wide Web became popular. Therefore in the early days, the name was original and humorous, even though now by coincidence the name is no longer original.