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Crossfire Zero (or CrossFire Web in China) was a free spin-off first-person shooter PC game for China in 2017 and the Southeast Asian market released in January 2020. This game featured two game modes, one which offered classic modes such as S&D and Team Deathmatch and the other offering a Battle Royale style mode.
Crossfire is an online tactical first-person shooter game developed by Smilegate Entertainment for Microsoft Windows.It was first released in South Korea on May 3, 2007.. Due to its popularity in Asia, especially China and South Korea, it has become one of the world's most-played video games by player count, [1] with a lifetime total of 1 billion users in 80 countries worldwide. [2]
CrossfireX was a first-person shooter and the console version of Crossfire (2007). The free-to-play multiplayer component is similar to Counter-Strike: Global Offensive, which sees two opposing teams, representing two hostile private military factions, compete in game modes to complete objectives.
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Crossfire is an American nightly current events debate television program that aired on CNN from June 25, 1982, to June 3, 2005, and again from September 9, 2013, to August 6, 2014. The format was designed to present and challenge the opinions of a politically liberal pundit and a conservative pundit.
X-Squad, known in Japan as X-Fire/Crossfire (XFIRE ~クロスファイア~, XFIRE ~Kurosufaia~), is a PlayStation 2 launch title developed and published by Electronic Arts Square under the EA Games label. [1] It was released on August 3, 2000 in Japan, October 26 in the U.S. and on December 8 in Europe.
Crossfire is a free and open source software cross-platform multiplayer online role-playing video game. Crossfire features a tile based graphic system with a pseudo-isometric perspective. All content is licensed under the GNU GPL-2.0-or-later .
AMD CrossFire (also known as CrossFireX) is a brand name for the multi-GPU technology by Advanced Micro Devices, originally developed by ATI Technologies. [1] The technology allows up to four GPUs to be used in a single computer to improve graphics performance.