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This is a list of commercial video games with available source code. The source code of these commercially developed and distributed video games is available to the public or the games' communities. In several of the cases listed here, the game's developers released the source code expressly to prevent their work from becoming lost.
English rapper and songwriter who was known best for his songs about video games Vladislav Bumaga: Belarus A4, A5 Music artist and video blogger Bo Burnham: United States boburnham, mahnrubob Comedian, comedic singer, musician, songwriter, and actor Tanya Burr: United Kingdom pixi2woo, tanyasvlogsandhauls Beauty, fashion and lifestyle vlogger.
GameRankings was a video gaming review aggregator that was founded in 1999 and owned by CBS Interactive. [1] It indexed over 315,000 articles relating to more than 14,500 video games. [when?] GameRankings was discontinued in December 2019, with its staff being merged with the similar aggregator Metacritic.
The source code has also been released; the game is still being sold on CD, but the open source version contains the full game content. Boppin' 1994 2005 [29] Puzzle Amiga, DOS Apogee Software: Castle Infinity: 1996 2000 MMOG: Windows: Starwave: Castle of the Winds: 1989 1998 [30] Role-playing video game: Windows 3.x: Epic MegaGames: Caves of ...
The games in this table were released under a free and open-source license with free content which allows reuse, modification and commercial redistribution of the whole game. Licenses can be public domain , GPL , BSD , Creative Commons , zlib , MIT , Artistic License or other (see Comparison of free and open-source software licenses ).
This category is for YouTubers who publish video reviews about films, music, video games, etc. Pages in category "YouTube critics and reviewers" The following 50 pages are in this category, out of 50 total.
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Clint Basinger (born December 20, 1986), [2] better known as LGR (originally an initialism of Lazy Game Reviews), is an American YouTuber who focuses on video game reviews, retrocomputing, and unboxing videos. His YouTube channel of the same name has been compared to Techmoan and The 8-Bit Guy.