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Dracula: Origin is a point-and-click adventure game for the PC based on the novel Dracula by Bram Stoker. Released by Frogwares in 2008, it follows the company's catalogue of adventure games such as the Adventures of Sherlock Holmes series. The game follows Professor Abraham Van Helsing as the protagonist through a unique take on the origin of ...
Dracula was a third-party software developed for Mattel's Intellivision video game system. While most games developed for the system were ports of games made for other systems, there were some console exclusive games, including Dracula. [4] Dracula was designed by Alan Smith with Wilfredo Aguilar assisting on some graphics. [5]
Castlevania (/ ˌ k æ s əl ˈ v eɪ n i ə /), known in Japan as Akumajō Dracula, [a] [2] is a gothic horror action-adventure video game series and media franchise created by Konami.The series is largely set in the castle of Count Dracula, the arch-enemy of the Belmont clan of vampire hunters.
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
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. Most versions are platform games.
Dracula: Resurrection was a co-production between Index+ and the companies France Telecom Multimedia and Canal+ Multimedia. [5] The project was headed by Index's long-time designer, art director and writer Jacques Simian, [38] [39] who had previously art directed the developer's Opération Teddy Bear. [39] Dracula represented a departure in ...
The BBC’s iconic 1995 TV adaptation of Jane Austen’s Pride and Prejudice reportedly cost roughly £1 million per episode (about $9.6 million) to make. And it shows. The attention to period ...
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]