
The Wild Thornberrys: Chimp Chase (GBA): A crocodile.SpongeBob SquarePants: Legend of the Lost Spatula (GBC): A shell-like form.Rugrats: Mystery Adventures (PC): A regular orange mouse seen from the top, which lights up.Rugrats: Studio Tour / Totally Angelica (PSX) and Scavenger Hunt (N64): A baby bottle.Rugrats: Search for Reptar (PSX): An odd star-like creature, which zooms in and swirls.Rocko's Modern Life: Spunky's Dangerous Day (SNES): A bone on a purple background with doodles of a bone, cake, a heart, a tennis ball, a TV, a stopwatch, a swirly pattern, a fork, and an arrow.AAAHH!!! Real Monsters (Genesis/SNES): A bat.

Logo: The standard Nickelodeon television logos from the era, with the name painted on various objects. Nickelodeon Interactive (April 1, 1994-2005) Nickelodeon also worked alongside THQ on an original game concept, Tak and the Power of Juju, which was later turned into an animated TV series. The deal expanded in 2001, when THQ acquired some assets from Mattel Interactive, namely the computer publishing rights, and all video game rights to The Wild Thornberrys. They started a long-standing relationship with game publisher THQ with the release of their Ren & Stimpy game for Nintendo consoles in 1992, followed up by a full-fledged console deal in 1998 with several Rugrats titles.

It was originally a part of Viacom Consumer Products, with early games being published by Viacom New Media.

Nickelodeon Games (formerly Nick Games from 2002-2009, Nickelodeon Software from 1997-2002, and Nickelodeon Interactive from 1993-1997) is the video gaming division of Nickelodeon.

Nickelodeon 3D Movie Maker is software game released in 1996, based on Microsoft 3D Movie Maker from from a year earlier.
