Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Pharaoh is an isometric city-building game released in November 1999. It was created by Impressions Games and published by Sierra Studios for Microsoft Windows.Using the same game engine and principles of Caesar III (also by Sierra Entertainment), it is the first such game in Sierra's City Building series to focus on another civilization of ancient times.
Impressions specialized in historical strategy games and is best known for its City Building Series, which include Caesar, Pharaoh, Zeus: Master of Olympus, and Emperor: Rise of the Middle Kingdom. In 1998, Impressions Games was the most profitable division of Havas Interactive, with $20 million in net profit.
Medieval Mayor was an announced city-building game set in the Middle Ages by Tilted Mill Entertainment for the PC and tablets. [1] Unlike the previous two games by Tilted Mill Entertainment, Immortal Cities: Children of the Nile and Caesar IV, the game would not use a 3D engine but return to the 2D engine, because Tilted Mill thought "2D works better in terms of players being able to tell what ...
Pharaoh: A New Era received positive reviews from critics on Metacritic, however the user score is generally unfavourable. [4] Rock Paper Shotgun said that although it lacks some of the complexity of modern games, it is "the definitive version of a stone-cold classic". [1]
Main page; Contents; Current events; Random article; About Wikipedia; Contact us; Donate
Nebuchadnezzar received "mixed or average" reviews according to review aggregator Metacritic. [10]PC Gamer summarized: "Nebuchadnezzar isn't lacking for class, but needs to dial up the fun factor."
In 1982, TSR published Pharaoh as a thirty-two-page booklet with two outer folders, for the first edition of AD&D. [7]: 101 It was designed for 6-8 player characters of levels 5–7, [10] and formed the first of the three-part Desert of Desolation module series. [1] [7]: 101 Oasis of the White Palm is the sequel to the Pharaoh module.
He led foreign conquests and embarked on what is considered the most ambitious building program since the Great Pyramids, restoring old monuments and erecting countless new ones. The program concludes with the life and death of Cleopatra as the last pharaoh. Covers Ramses II, Ramses III, and Cleopatra VII. [17]