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Category: Arena shooters. ... Download QR code; Print/export Download as PDF; Printable version; In other projects Wikidata item; Appearance. move to sidebar hide. Help
Download QR code; Print/export Download as PDF; ... Arena shooters (13 P) C. Cabal shooters (14 P) H. Hero shooters (1 C, 35 P) L. Light gun games (5 C, 139 P)
Arena shooters can be traced back to the early days of first person shooters with the first modern shooter, Wolfenstein 3D (1992), establishing the basic groundwork of shooter mechanics which were later replicated in future games. In these early shooters the weapons were held and aimed in the middle of the screen and did not require the player ...
Fast-paced, Hollywood tactical shooter. Originally a Quake 3 mod, now a standalone game. Warmonger: Operation Downtown Destruction: NetDevil 2007-11-28 2009-08-27 Windows: Unreal Engine 3: GNU GPL (code), Proprietary license (media) High-end Free-to-play first person shooter with destructible environments.. Warsow: Warsow team 2005-06-08 2016 ...
The Elder Scrolls: Arena: MS-DOS: March 25, 1994: Bethesda Softworks [17] The Terminator: Future Shock: MS-DOS: August 1995: Bethesda Softworks [18] PBA Bowling: Windows: November 15, 1995: Bethesda Softworks and MediaTech West [19] The Elder Scrolls II: Daggerfall: MS-DOS: September 20, 1996: Bethesda Softworks and MediaTech West [20] Skynet ...
Red Eclipse is a multiplayer first-person arena shooter, similar to Cube 2: Sauerbraten, with a style of play comparable to Quake III Arena or Unreal Tournament. [4] [5] Players fight in two randomly assigned teams — Alpha (Blue) and Omega (Red) — which can be changed with mutators.
This is a list of games made by the American video game developer and publisher MicroProse. The games in this list were developed internally by MicroProse . Some games made by other developers were published under MicroProse's Microplay or MicroStyle label.
Unreal Tournament 2003 is a first-person arena shooter video game developed by Epic Games and Digital Extremes, and published by Infogrames under the Atari brand name. The game is part of the Unreal franchise, and is a sequel to 1999's Unreal Tournament. Like its predecessor, the game is designed mainly for multiplayer gaming.