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  2. Robot Arena 2: Design and Destroy - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Robot_Arena_2:_Design_and...

    Robot Arena 2: Design and Destroy is an Action game. The player controls a radio-controlled robot which battles it out with other robots in order to win. Ways to win a battle include destroying the opponent's control board, immobilizing the opponent (such as flipping them over), having the most points at the end or in some cases eliminating them by pushing them into pits.

  3. .hack (video game series) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/.hack_(video_game_series)

    .hack (/ d ɒ t h æ k /) is a series of single-player action role-playing video games developed by CyberConnect2 and published by Bandai for the PlayStation 2.The four games, .hack//Infection, .hack//Mutation, .hack//Outbreak, and .hack//Quarantine, all feature a "game within a game", a fictional massively multiplayer online role-playing game (MMORPG) called The World which does not require ...

  4. OpenArena - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/OpenArena

    The OpenArena project was established on August 19, 2005, one day after the id Tech 3 source code released under GNU GPL-2.0-or-later license.. OpenArena was officially released for Microsoft Windows, Linux, and macOS.

  5. RoboMind - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/RoboMind

    RoboMind offers a basic scripting language that consists of a concise set of rules. Apart from commands to make the robot perform basic movement instructions, the control flow can be modified by conditional branching (if-then-else), loops (while) and calls to custom procedures. Example script to draw square:

  6. id Tech 3 - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Id_Tech_3

    Like id's earlier titles Doom and Quake, Quake III Arena features multiplayer support via features built into its engine. id Tech 3 uses a snapshot system to relay information about game frames to the client over UDP. The server updates object interaction at a fixed rate independent of the rate that clients update the server with their actions ...

  7. Arena (web browser) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Arena_(web_browser)

    The Arena browser (also known as the Arena WWW Browser) [12] [13] was one of the first web browsers for Unix. [ 11 ] [ 14 ] Originally begun by Dave Raggett in 1993, development continued at CERN and the World Wide Web Consortium (W3C) and subsequently by Yggdrasil Computing.

  8. Robot Framework - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Robot_Framework

    The basic ideas for Robot Framework were shaped in Pekka Klärck's masters thesis [3] in 2005. The first version was developed at Nokia Networks the same year. Version 2.0 was released as open source software June 24, 2008 and version 3.0.2 was released February 7, 2017.

  9. Anonymous (hacker group) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Anonymous_(hacker_group)

    Sam Esmail shared in an interview with Motherboard that he was inspired by Anonymous when creating the USA Network hacktivist drama, Mr. Robot. [62] Furthermore, Wired calls the "Omegas", a fictitious hacker group in the show, "a clear reference to the Anonymous offshoot known as LulzSec ". [ 63 ]