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zlib (engine) / LGPL-2.1-or-later [24] (game code) LGPL-2.1-or-later [24] 3D: A voxel engine for building games similar to Infiniminer and Minecraft. Lugaru: 2005 2017 Action/third-person shooter: GPL-2.0-or-later: CC BY-SA [25] 3D: A game by Wolfire Games where the player is an anthropomorphic rabbit who seeks revenge when a group of enemy ...
Artistic-2.0/MIT-like (engine/game code) Freeware: Richard Hofmeier In March 2014 the game was removed from all digital distributions and the source code and game was made available for free online, with Hofmeier saying he was finished supporting the game. [159] His webpage went later offline [160] but the source code was mirrored on GitHub ...
Pages in category "Commercial video games with freely available source code" The following 200 pages are in this category, out of approximately 300 total. This list may not reflect recent changes .
The online video game platform and game creation system Roblox has numerous games (officially referred to as "experiences") [1] [2] created by users of its creation tool, Roblox Studio. Due to Roblox ' s popularity, various games created on the site have grown in popularity, with some games having millions of monthly active players and 5,000 ...
Some free-to-play online first-person shooters use a client–server model, in which only the client is available for free. They may be associated with business models such as optional microtransactions or in-game advertising. Some of these may be MMOFPS, MMOTPS or MMORPG games.
FLOSS game engines, like the Godot game engine, as well as libraries, like SDL, are increasingly common in game development, even proprietary ones. [6] Given that game art is not considered software, there is debate about the philosophical or ethical obstacles in selling a game where its art is proprietary but the entire source code is free ...
Roblox is an online game platform and game creation system built around user-generated content and games, [1] [2] officially referred to as "experiences". [3] Games can be created by any user through the platforms game engine, Roblox Studio, [4] and then shared to and played by other players. [1]
These non-commercial developed video games (freeware and hobbyists) have had their source-code released to the public under various licenses but are not free and open-source software. Pages in category "Video games with available source code"