. . . . "Whoopee Camp"@en . . "2000-01-01T00:00:00+02:00"^^ . "Whoopee Camp"@it . . . "2000-01-01T00:00:00+01:00"^^ . . . "200"^^ . . "Whoopee Camp was a video game developer started in 1997. They had hoped to make innovations in the gaming world but only made two games: Ore! Tomba in Japan, Tomba! in North America, Tombi! in Europe in 1997, and Tomba! The Wild Adventures in Japan, Tomba! 2: The Evil Swine Return in North America, Tombi! 2 in Europe in 1999."@en . . . . . . . . . . . "Whoopee Camp era una software house giapponese fondata nel 1997, e responsabile dello sviluppo di soli due giochi: Tombi! (il titolo europeo, negli Stati Uniti era noto come Tomba! mentre il titolo originale era Ore! Tomba) e il suo seguito Tombi! 2, uscito nel 1999."@it . . . "1997"^^ . . . . "Whoopee Camp era una software house giapponese fondata nel 1997, e responsabile dello sviluppo di soli due giochi: Tombi! (il titolo europeo, negli Stati Uniti era noto come Tomba! mentre il titolo originale era Ore! Tomba) e il suo seguito Tombi! 2, uscito nel 1999. La compagnia aveva sperato di rinnovare il mondo dei videogiochi; sebbene i due capitoli della serie di Tombi avessero ottenuto riscontri positivi ed ebbero uno discreto successo di vendite, la software house fall\u00EC nel 2000, e i suoi componenti presero strade diverse nel mondo dei videogames. La societ\u00E0, sotto il nome Whoopee Camp Co. Ltd. , \u00E8 citata nei ringraziamenti del videogioco survival horror Extermination del 2001."@it . . "Whoopee Camp Co., Ltd."@en . "1997-01-01T00:00:00+01:00"^^ . . . . . . "1997-01-01T00:00:00+02:00"^^ . "Whoopee Camp was a video game developer started in 1997. They had hoped to make innovations in the gaming world but only made two games: Ore! Tomba in Japan, Tomba! in North America, Tombi! in Europe in 1997, and Tomba! The Wild Adventures in Japan, Tomba! 2: The Evil Swine Return in North America, Tombi! 2 in Europe in 1999. Tomba! is a game about a child of the same name with pink hair and green shorts that has to get his grandfather's bracelet back from the evil pigs invading an uncharted continent, while Tomba! 2 was about a completely different group of evil pigs (aside from the leader, the last evil pig) kidnapping Tomba's childhood friend Tabby and trying to take over the continent where Tabby lives on. Both games were critically well received but in the long run, they both sold poorly mainly due to very low avaibility of the game in stores and as a result never attained Greatest Hits/Platinum status. Today, both Tomba! games are very rare and sold at high prices. Whoopee Camp split and the staff went to work for other companies shortly after the release of Tomba! 2 (with most of them going to Access Games)."@en . . "2000"^^ . . . . "Whoopee Camp Co., Ltd."@en . "Whoopee Camp was a video game developer started in 1997. They had hoped to make innovations in the gaming world but only made two games: Tomba! (Tombi outside the U.S. and Ore! Tomba in Japan) in 1997, and Tomba! 2: The Evil Swine Return in 1999. Tomba! was a game about a child with pink hair and green shorts that had to get his grandfathers bracelet back from the evil pigs invading their world. While Tomba! 2 was about a completely different group of evil pigs (aside from the leader, the last evil pig) kidnapping the child's childhood friend, Tabby and trying to take over the continent Tabby lives on. Both games were critically well received but in the long run, they both sold poorly and never attained Greatest Hits/Platinum status. Today, both Tomba! games are very rare and many sellers on eBay will sell copies of both games for ridiculous prices regardless of conditions. Tomba! is the most expensive ranging from $60\u201370, while Tomba! 2 ranges from $40\u201350. Both games new can be priced around $100 \u2013 $150. Whoopee Camp split and the staff went to work for other companies shortly after the release of Tomba! 2 (with most of them going to Access Games)."@en . .