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Flight of the Intruder: The Air War in Vietnam) Flight of the Intruder (1991 NES game. aka Phantom Air Mission.) Chuck Yeager's Air Combat (1991) Vietnam (1995 video game) (1995) Wings Over Vietnam (2004) Strike Fighters 2: Vietnam (2009) (Enhanced edition of Wings Over Vietnam) Gunship III (2012) Air Conflicts: Vietnam (2013) (Also under ...
Conflict: Vietnam is a tactical shooter video game developed by Pivotal Games and published by Global Star Software and SCi Games for PlayStation 2, Xbox, and Windows. Released in 2004, it is the third installment in the Conflict series. A separate version was developed by 8bit Games and published by Synergenix for mobile devices the same year.
Various names have been applied and have shifted over time, though Vietnam War is the most commonly used title in English. It has been called the Second Indochina War since it spread to Laos and Cambodia, [63] the Vietnam Conflict, [64] [65] and Nam (colloquially 'Nam). In Vietnam it is commonly known as Kháng chiến chống Mỹ (lit.
Sino-Vietnamese conflicts (1945–1946) or Chinese Kuomintang occupation of Vietnam (Vietnamese: Hoa quân nhập Việt), (Chinese: 華軍入越) were a series of clashes between the Republic of China and the communist Viet Minh following the August Revolution.
Famous torrent site RARBG has shut down, blaming a variety of traumatic factors that have left its staff unable to work. The site will be going offline after two “difficult” years, staff said ...
Conflict: Desert Storm is a tactical shooter video game developed by Pivotal Games and published by SCi Games and Gotham Games for Microsoft Windows, PlayStation 2, Xbox, and GameCube; it is the first installment in the Conflict series.
Jin–Lâm Ấp conflicts (351–415) First war (351–359) Jiaozhou under Jin dynasty: Lâm Ấp (Linyi) Victory for Jin: Second war (399) Third war (413–415) Liu Song-Lâm Ấp War (445–446) Jiaozhou under Liu Song dynasty: Lâm Ấp (Linyi) Victory for Liu Song. Sack of Kandarapura, capital city of Lâm Ấp, by the Liu Song.
And drones played an important—and today largely unheralded—role in the bloody, two-decade U.S. air war over Vietnam and surrounding countries in the 1960s and ’70s.