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  2. Blood Bowl (1995 video game) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Blood_Bowl_(1995_video_game)

    PC Gamer US ' s Dan Bennett called Blood Bowl "an enjoyable game, as long as you don't think too much about how good it could have been." He criticized the slowness of the game's AI opponent, and the lack of the modem play advertised on Blood Bowl ' s packaging. However, he concluded, "[F]or fans of the board game, it's a must."

  3. Blood Bowl 3 - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Blood_Bowl_3

    A change from Blood Bowl 2 is the tutorial and how new players are taught the game because "Blood Bowl is a very complex game, very hard to get into." It was felt the tutorial in Blood Bowl 2 was overly long and so an aim with this game was to compress the tutorial down to 45 to 60 minutes and teach the 'basic tools' to play the game. [35]

  4. Blood Bowl 2 - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Blood_Bowl_2

    PC Gamer awarded it a 60%, saying "Blood Bowl 2 is the flashiest iteration of the game so far, but its dice rolls are frustrating, and its ample ruleset isn't introduced well to newcomers." [18] IGN awarded it 7.8 out of 10, saying "Blood Bowl 2 is a smashy, satisfying, goofy tactical melee that leaves just a bit too much up to the six-sided dice."

  5. Blood Bowl - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Blood_Bowl

    In 2004, French-based Cyanide Studio developed a game called Chaos League (and, later, a subsequent expansion Chaos League: Sudden Death) which bore a heavy resemblance to Blood Bowl in its style and rules, even though it was a real-time game (rather than turn-based, like Blood Bowl). Games Workshop sued over the similarities, but later ...

  6. Blood Bowl (2009 video game) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Blood_Bowl_(2009_video_game)

    Blood Bowl is a 2009 fantasy sports video game developed by Cyanide, loosely based on gridiron football, and adapted from the board game of the same name, which is produced by Games Workshop, using the CRP ruleset. [1] It was released for Microsoft Windows, Xbox 360, Nintendo DS, PlayStation Portable, iOS, and Android.

  7. Blood (video game) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Blood_(video_game)

    Blood is a 3D first-person shooter video game developed by Monolith Productions and published by GT Interactive and developed using Ken Silverman’s Build engine. The shareware version was released for MS-DOS on March 7, 1997, [ 1 ] while the full version was later released on May 21 in North America, [ 2 ] and June 20 in Europe.

  8. Gemfire - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gemfire

    Gemfire (released in Japan as Royal Blood or ロイヤルブラッド Roiyaru Buraddo, Super Royal Blood or スーパーロイヤルブラッド Sūpā Roiyaru Buraddo in its Super Famicom version) is a medieval war game for MSX, Nintendo Entertainment System, Super NES, FM Towns, Mega Drive/Genesis, DOS, and later Microsoft Windows, developed by Koei.

  9. Bloodforge - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bloodforge

    Bloodforge was developed by Climax Studios who collaborated with Microsoft to work on the game to only be released on Xbox 360 for the Xbox Live Arcade. After the game was completed, Microsoft decided to publish the game themselves and complete it under Microsoft Studios. Bloodforge was released on April 25, 2012, on XBLA. An update on July 27 ...