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Worlds of Ultima: The Savage Empire is a role-playing video game, part in the Ultima series, published in 1990. It is considered a Worlds of Ultima game, as its setting differs from that of the main series. It uses the same engine as Ultima VI: The False Prophet and Martian Dreams.
Savage: The Battle for Newerth: 2004 A blend of FPS and RTS gameplay Windows, Linux, Mac OS X S2 Games: Savage 2: A Tortured Soul: 2008 2008 Windows, Linux, Mac OS X S.D.I: 1986 [80] Action adventure Amiga, Atari ST, Commodore 64, DOS, Macintosh: Cinemaware: SimCity: 1989 2008 (as OLPC SimCity) City-building game: Windows, DOS
Ultima: The Black Gate (SNES) — Action-adventure remake. Ultima: The Savage Empire (SNES) — A graphical update using the Black Gate engine for the SNES. Japan only, canceled in the US. Ultima Underworld: The Stygian Abyss (PlayStation) — Uses 3D models rather than the 2D sprites of the original. Released only in Japan.
Game engine recreation is a type of video game engine remastering process wherein a new game engine is written from scratch as a clone of the original with the full ability to read the original game's data files.
Ultima VI: The False Prophet, released by Origin Systems in 1990, is the sixth part in the role-playing video game series of Ultima. It is the third and final game in the "Age of Enlightenment" trilogy. Ultima VI sees the player return to Britannia, at war with a race of gargoyles from another land, struggling to stop a prophecy from ending ...
Ultima: Worlds of Adventure 2: Martian Dreams is a role-playing video game, part of the Ultima series, published in 1991, and re-released for Windows and Mac OS via GOG.com in 2012. It uses the same engine as Ultima VI: The False Prophet , as did Worlds of Ultima: The Savage Empire .
Gold Box is a series of role-playing video games produced by Strategic Simulations from 1988 to 1992. The company acquired a license to produce games based on the Advanced Dungeons & Dragons role-playing game from TSR, Inc. [1] These games shared a common game engine that came to be known as the "Gold Box Engine" after the gold-colored boxes in which most games of the series were sold.
Retrogaming is the playing of older games [284] using emulators such as MAME or Dosbox, [285] compatibility layers such as Wine and Proton, [286] engine reimplementations and source ports, [287] or even older Linux distributions (including live CDs and live USB, or virtual machines), [288] [289] original binaries, [290] and period hardware.