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Video games about time travel (12 C, 366 P) Pages in category "Time travel games" The following 14 pages are in this category, out of 14 total.
ABCya.com, L.L.C. (also stylized as ABCya!) is an American website that provides educational games and activities for school-aged children. The games on the website are organized into grade levels from pre-kindergarten to Sixth grade, as well as into subject categories such as letters, numbers, and holidays.
Mario & Luigi: Partners in Time; Mario's Time Machine; Marvel's Avengers (video game) Meantime (video game) MediEvil 2; Mega Man II (1991 video game) The Messenger (2000 video game) Metal Slug 7; Mickey Mania; Might and Magic II: Gates to Another World; The Misadventures of P.B. Winterbottom; Mortal Kombat (2011 video game) Mortal Kombat 11
We've already brought you a general game guide for ZeptoLab's brand new game, but if you're looking for a spoiler-tastic Cut The Rope: Time Travel walkthrough, we'll be pulling together all of the ...
The Silent Age is a point and click adventure game, developed by Danish indie game studio House on Fire, [4] [5] and released for iOS, Android, Kindle Fire, Windows, Mac.The game's story focuses on a janitor who is plunged into a task of saving humanity from an apocalyptic event by using time travel, discovering the future that will come about if the event is not prevented.
Reviewing version 1.4 with "The Gore Years" expansion, Jonathan H. Liu of GeekDad said, "If you like the idea of time travel, Chrononauts is a fun way to play with it". Liu doesn't recommend the Artifaxx variant rule set except for younger players. [1] Also reviewing the game with the Gore expansion, Meople's Magazine rated the game over all a ...
Continuum: Roleplaying in the Yet (stylized as C°ntinuum: roleplaying in The Yet) is a science fiction role-playing game about time travel created by Chris Adams, Dave Fooden and Barbara Manui and published by Aetherco/Dreamcatcher. The Continuum also refers to a collective group of time travelers as a whole and the society they inhabit in the ...
If you're into this sort of game (and I confess, I'm not), Timemaster may be a good choice. It's got a fairly interesting unifying theme; the game does an excellent job of making time travel seem plausible, and the "Guide to the Continuum" is a gem. In this most open-ended form of roleplaying, providing players direction is no simple task.