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Dragonfly is a South Korean video game developer and publisher based in Seoul. While a small company, it is notable for releasing many popular games both in Korea and globally including Special Force and Karma and still continue to release games both domestically and abroad. [ 2 ]
Such software assist in the drawing of maps, player character and non-player character creation, generation of monsters, and provision of dice rolls and their results. The software may be specific to a single role playing game system, or flexible enough to be applied to multiple game models.
This is a list of free and open-source software (FOSS) packages, computer software licensed under free software licenses and open-source licenses. Software that fits the Free Software Definition may be more appropriately called free software ; the GNU project in particular objects to their works being referred to as open-source . [ 1 ]
Special Force (named Soldier Front in North America) is an online free-to-play first-person shooter game developed by the South Korean video game developer Dragonfly, which is based in Seoul. Although a small company, it is notable for releasing many popular games both inside and outside Korea, including: Special Force and Karma.
Boxee, made by startup company Boxee Inc., is a freeware and partly open source software cross-platform media center and entertainment hub with social networking features that is a commercial fork of XBMC software. [8] [9] [10] Boxee supported Windows, Linux, and OS X, with the first Alpha made available on 16 June 2008. Boxee as a company was ...
The Legend of Mir 2 (Korean: 미르의 전설 2) is a sprite-based isometric 3-D massively multiplayer online role-playing game developed by Korean-based WeMade Entertainment. There are currently two versions available: Korean and Chinese .
A version of Glider 4 for Microsoft Windows was released around 1994. [1] In 1994, Casady & Greene published a further enhanced version of the game, Glider PRO, for the Mac. [2] When Casady & Greene went bankrupt in 2003, [3] the rights to the series reverted to the author, who opted for a period of time to give the game away on his website. [4]
Media Player Classic development stalled in May 2006. Gabest, the main developer of the original version, stated in March 2007 that development of Media Player Classic is not dead but that he was unable to work on it. [6] MPC 6.4.9.0, released March 20, 2006, is the final official version.