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Crossfire is an online tactical first-person shooter game developed by Smilegate Entertainment for Microsoft Windows.It was first released in South Korea on May 3, 2007.. Due to its popularity in Asia, especially China and South Korea, it has become one of the world's most-played video games by player count, [1] with a lifetime total of 1 billion users in 80 countries worldwide. [2]
CrossfireX was a first-person shooter and the console version of Crossfire (2007). The free-to-play multiplayer component is similar to Counter-Strike: Global Offensive, which sees two opposing teams, representing two hostile private military factions, compete in game modes to complete objectives. Classic mode sees the attacking team attempting ...
Crossfire Zero (or CrossFire Web in China) was a free spin-off first-person shooter PC game for China in 2017 and the Southeast Asian market released in January 2020. This game featured two game modes, one which offered classic modes such as S&D and Team Deathmatch and the other offering a Battle Royale style mode.
The company is rolling out internet-free neural machine translation to its Translate apps for Android and iOS, promising much more accurate language conversion when you don't have the luxury of data.
Smilegate is a South Korean video game company headquartered in Pangyo.It develops, publishes, and services online games on mobile and PC platforms. Established in South Korea in 2002, [2] it is the creator of Crossfire, an FPS game with over six million concurrent players across the globe, [3] and many more titles.
Round-trip translation (RTT), also known as back-and-forth translation, recursive translation and bi-directional translation, is the process of translating a word, phrase or text into another language (forward translation), then translating the result back into the original language (back translation), using machine translation (MT) software.
Later on, because of its steady rise in popularity, it was released as Google Transliteration IME for offline use in December 2009. It works on a dictionary-based phonetic transliteration approach, which means that whatever you type in Latin characters, it matches the characters with its dictionary and transliterates them.
Crossfire was used as the base of a number of commercial and free MMORPGs, such as Wyvern, a Java rewrite, [6] Graal Kingdoms, which closed its code and content, [7] and Daimonin, which only used the server code but features an isometric view and a different project philosophy focused on a single main server. [8]