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Anno 1404, known as Dawn of Discovery in North America, is a city-building and economic simulation game with real-time strategy elements, part of the Anno series. Released in 2009, it was developed by Related Designs, produced by Blue Byte, and published by Ubisoft. Anno 1404 is the sequel to Anno 1701 and is followed by the futuristic sequel ...
Dawn of Discovery may refer to: Anno 1404, a 2009 computer game, known as Dawn of Discovery in North America; Anno: Create A New World, a 2009 Nintendo Wii and DS ...
Anno: Create a New World (German: Anno: Erschaffe eine neue Welt) , also known as Dawn of Discovery in North America, is a real-time strategy and city-building game for Nintendo DS and Wii. It was developed by Keen Games and is published by Ubisoft. The game is a spin-off of the Anno series.
Year Game Developer Setting Platform Notes 1964: The Sumerian Game: Mabel Addis: Historical: MAIN: Text-based game based on the ancient Sumerian city of Lagash. [1]1969: The Sumer Game
Month Day Event January 29–31 Ensemble Studios, the creators of the Age of Empires series, was shut down after about 15 years of service. [6] [7]February 3–5 Crytek, the developers of FarCry and Crysis, buys Free Radical Design, the developers of the TimeSplitters series [8] [9] and renames them to Crytek UK.
FairLight (FLT) is a warez and demo group initially involved in the Commodore demoscene, and in cracking to illegally release games for free, since 1987. In addition to the C64, FairLight has also migrated towards the Amiga, Super NES and later the PC. [1]
Anno 1701: Dawn of Discovery, also known as simply Anno 1701 in Germany, is a real-time strategy video game of the Anno franchise for the Nintendo DS. It is published by Disney Interactive and makes extensive use of the system's touch-screen capabilities. There are three game mode options, consisting of a story mode, continuous play, and ...
They were formed in 1990 as a cooperative Commodore 64 demo coding and cracking group. TRSI migrated from the Commodore 64 release platform to the Amiga and IBM-PC, and eventually branched off into the console gaming scene before finally disbanding their warez division. In late 2003, TRSI became inactive and remains so today.