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Starlink: Battle for Atlas is an action-adventure video game developed by Ubisoft Toronto and published by Ubisoft. It was released for the Nintendo Switch, PlayStation 4, and Xbox One on October 16, 2018, and for Microsoft Windows on April 30, 2019. The game also features optional toys-to-life elements. It received generally positive reviews ...
A block of wood is simply an object of potential, but when you put a face, wheels, and a nice coat of paint on it, it’s a vessel, a pathway out of reality and into your own imagination. It’s ...
Game Boy Color: August 11, 2000 [101] Atlus: deSPIRIA: Dreamcast: September 21, 2000 [102] Atlus: Shin Megami Tensei: Devil Children - Aka no Sho: Game Boy Color: November 17, 2000 [103] Multimedia Intelligence Transfer Shin Megami Tensei: Devil Children - Kuro no Sho: Game Boy Color: November 17, 2000 [104] Multimedia Intelligence Transfer ...
Space Opera is a science-fiction role-playing game created by Edward E. Simbalist, A. Mark Ratner, and Phil McGregor in 1980 for Fantasy Games Unlimited (FGU). While the game's system can be used to create any science fiction genre, Space Opera has a default setting focused on creating space opera themed adventures.
The non-video game assets were spun off under the Index name a few months later and sold in 2016, leaving the video game division under the Atlus name as a subsidiary of Sega. A North American branch of the company, originally Atlus USA and now Atlus West, was founded in 1991 in order to focus on publishing and localizing games for North America.
Electronic Arts, the largest video game developer in the world, is the latest company to reveal plans for a cloud gaming platform. ... Project Atlas will be able to stream full quality video games ...
William A. Barton reviewed Star Sector Atlas 1: the Terran Sector in The Space Gamer No. 45. [1] Barton commented that "If you're a Space Opera player or GM, you'll probably find Star Sector Atlas 1: the Terran Sector an invaluable play aid. Even those who prefer other SF systems might find some useful items to adapt to their games as well." [1]
Jerry Epperson reviewed Star Sector Atlas 2: The Mercantile League in Space Gamer No. 70. [1] Epperson commented that "Giving Star Sector Atlas 2 anything more than a qualified recommendation would be grounds for admission to a rubber room. If you really want someone developing about fifty different stars, dumping them in your lap, and saying ...