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Star Wars: Tiny Death Star is a business simulation video game developed by Disney Mobile and NimbleBit, [4] and published by Disney Mobile for Android, iOS, Windows Phone, and Windows 8/RT devices. [5] It was based on NimbleBit's previous game, Tiny Tower, [6] and was set in the Star Wars universe. [7]
Chris Hind reviewed Death Star Technical Companion in White Wolf #30 (Feb., 1992), rating it a 3 out of 5 and stated that "Death Star Technical Companion's strongest point is its completeness. It contains every important fact concerning the Death Star, without going into excessive detail.
Star Wars: The Roleplaying Game, by West End Games (1987–1999); Star Wars Roleplaying Game, by Wizards of the Coast (2000–2010); Star Wars Roleplaying Game, initially by Fantasy Flight Games (2012–2020), [1] [2] and now by Edge Studio (2020–present) after parent company Asmodee moved the Star Wars Roleplaying Game license [2] [3]
Elwood Edwards, a behind-the-scenes graphics and camera operator at local Cleveland television station WKYC whose voice was propelled to worldwide fame after he recorded AOL’s email greeting ...
On February 7, 2012, Tiny Tower reached 10 million downloads, so Nimblebit gave all Tiny Tower users 10 free "tower bux". [3] The game received a positive reception, reaching a score of 82/100 on Metacritic, with no negative reviews. In the App Store, Tiny Tower reached 4.5 / 5 stars, based on more than 155 thousand user reviews.
Like other Living Card Games, each card cycle consists of six packs of pre-determined cards—referred to as “force packs”—that focus on a particular theme or setting from within the Star Wars universe, including story elements that have only made an appearance in the formerly canon expanded universe now known as “Star Wars Legends.”
Young Jedi Collectible Card Game is an out-of-print collectible card game published by Decipher, Inc. that was released in May 1999. [1] It was based on the events and characters of the movie The Phantom Menace in the Star Wars universe. [2] Seven expansions were released before the game was discontinued in September 2001.
The game is set on Crocodile Isle, with eight worlds of varying environments, totaling 52 levels. The game uses the same Silicon Graphics (SGI) technology from the original, which features the use of pre-rendered 3D imagery. Diddy's Kong Quest received acclaim, being widely regarded as one of the greatest 2D platformers ever made. Praise was ...