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  2. Prodeus - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Prodeus

    Prodeus is a first-person shooter game developed by Bounding Box Software and published by Humble Games. [1] The game was crowdfunded by a Kickstarter campaign in April 2019. An early access version was released on November 9, 2020. [2]

  3. List of freeware first-person shooters - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_freeware_first...

    FPS with sandbox style level-editor Cube 2 Engine: Wouter van Oortmerssen: 2004 Yes: Yes: Yes: No zlib License (code), Individual licenses (media) FPS with sandbox style level-editor Dim3: Brian Barnes No: Yes: Yes: No MIT License: Development set id Tech 0: id Software: 1995 Yes: Yes: Yes: No GPL-2.0-or-later: Wolfenstein 3D.

  4. Enlisted (video game) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Enlisted_(video_game)

    Enlisted is a free squad-based multiplayer tactical first-person shooter developed by Darkflow Software and published by Gaijin Entertainment. The game is set during World War II and revolves around major battles fought across all fronts of the war. It was an Xbox Series X/S launch title and timed console exclusive. [1]

  5. HyperSizer - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/HyperSizer

    HyperSizer competes in the analysis and sizing software market with Firehole Composites, ESI, and ESAComp among others. HyperSizer Pro was rated first in the "tools of the month" by Desktop Engineering magazine in July 2011. [16] HyperSizer Express was named "Editor's Pick" by Desktop Engineering in March 2016. [17]

  6. Front Page Sports Football - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Front_Page_Sports_Football

    Front Page Sports Football (or FPS Football), first released in 1992, was the first in a series of American football simulations released by Sierra Online. The Front Page Sports series was notable for being one of the first football simulations to include a career mode where players aged and retired, and for the number of statistics it offered.

  7. Final Cut Pro - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Final_Cut_Pro

    In April 2004, Final Cut Pro 4.5 was released and branded as "Final Cut Pro HD" due to its native support for Panasonic's tape-based DVCPRO HD format for compressed 720p and 1080i HD over FireWire. (While the software had been capable of uncompressed HD editing since version 3.0, it required expensive video cards and high-speed storage at the ...