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Dracula (1983 video game) Dracula (1986 video game) Dracula: Resurrection; Dracula 2: The Last Sanctuary; Dracula 3: The Path of the Dragon; Dracula 4: The Shadow of the Dragon; Dracula 5: The Blood Legacy; Dracula the Undead (video game) Dracula Twins; Dracula Unleashed; Dracula: Crazy Vampire; Dracula: Origin; Dráscula: The Vampire Strikes Back
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Tower Defense/Survival Horror video game. An adventurer Captain Greg defends the gates, the last barrier that protects the humans from the vampires. [32] Transformice: 2010 Windows, Mac, Linux: Multiplayer free-to-play platform video game. Vampires appear in the survivor game mode, where players must run to avoid being bitten by them.
Combined global sales of Dracula 3 and its predecessors, Dracula and Dracula 2, reached 1 million copies by 2009. [30] Adventure Classic Gaming's Mervyn Graham scored the game 5 out of 5, calling it "amongst the best adventure games released in recent years." He praised the gameplay, writing "Dracula 3: The Path of the Dragon is a cut above the ...
Dracula 2: The Last Sanctuary (originally released as Dracula: The Last Sanctuary) is a 2000 graphic adventure video game developed by Wanadoo Edition and jointly published by Index+, France Telecom Multimedia, Canal+ Multimedia and Cryo Interactive. Originally released for Windows and Mac OS, it was ported to the PlayStation in 2002.
Vampire Killer, known in Japan as Akumajō Dracula, [a] [1] is a 1986 platform game developed and published by Konami for the MSX2. It is a parallel version of the original Castlevania , which debuted a month earlier for the Famicom Disk System under the same Japanese title.
The game is based on Bram Stoker's tale of Count Dracula, similar to how the developer's earlier role-playing game King Arthur was based on the tale of King Arthur. [1] The game is not set strictly in the same fictional universe as Bram Stoker's novel Dracula, but rather a similar one in a twisted 19th century Europe with "monsters, magic and weird technology". [3]
Bram Stoker's Dracula is a 1993 video game released for the Mega Drive/Genesis, Nintendo Entertainment System, Super NES, Game Boy, Master System, Sega CD, Game Gear, MS-DOS, and Amiga. It is based on the 1992 film Bram Stoker's Dracula which in turn is based on the 1897 novel Dracula by Bram Stoker .