Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Titles like Star Trek: Armada, Star Trek: Elite Force and Star Trek: Bridge Commander were all published during this period, as were over half of all the other major Star Trek PC games. The absence of new titles after 2003 was due in large measure to a split and subsequent lawsuit between Activision and Viacom which ended in 2004.
A sequel, Star Trek: Armada II, was released on November 16, 2001. In a cross-promotion with the Star Trek Customizable Card Game, an initial run of Armada boxes contained an exclusive playable card, the USS Jupiter. [4] On December 13, 2021, Armada and its sequel were re-released on GoG.com, which had previously released several other older ...
In universe timeline chronological order Star Trek: Enterprise (ENT), Star Trek: The Original Series (TOS), Star Trek: The Animated Series (TAS), Star Trek: The Next Generation (TNG), and all 13 of the Star Trek feature films, including the three newest J. J. Abrams "reboot" films, or "Kelvin Timeline" based on the original series.
The Star Trek Customizable Card Game is an out-of-print collectible card game based on the Star Trek universe. [2] The name is commonly abbreviated as STCCG or ST:CCG.It was first introduced in 1994 by Decipher, Inc., under the name Star Trek: The Next Generation Customizable Card Game. [3]
Star Trek: Armada II was released by Activision a year after they acquired the full rights to all the franchise holding of the video game's franchise from Viacom. [ citation needed ] It was the first of the three major Star Trek video game sequel titles [ citation needed ] that were released by Activision from 2001 until their departure from ...
Geoffery Mandel, who helped create Pocket Books's interstellar reference work Star Trek: Star Charts, worked as scenic artist on the Voyager and Enterprise series as well as the film Star Trek: Insurrection. For details on out-of-universe reference books see List of Star Trek reference books. The following list is incomplete.
The Making of Star Trek: Stephen E. Whitfield, Gene Roddenberry: Behind the Scenes ISBN 0-345-31554-5: 1968–1976 Star Trek Concordance: First edition Dorothy J. Heydt, Bjo Trimble: General ISBN 0-345-25137-7: 1980 Star Trek Spaceflight Chronology: In-universe ISBN 0-671-79089-7: 1975 Star Trek Star Fleet Technical Manual: Franz Joseph: Technology
Armada is a video game developed and published by Metro3D.It was released for the Sega Dreamcast in North America on November 26, 1999. Armada is a shooter role-playing game (RPG) that allows up to four players to fly about the universe, fighting the enemy, performing missions and improving their ship.