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Dune II: The Building of a Dynasty, later retitled Dune II: Battle for Arrakis for the European release and the Mega Drive/Genesis port, was released in December 1992 from Westwood Studios/Virgin Interactive. [9] [10] Often considered to be the first "mainstream modern real-time strategy game", Dune II established many conventions of the genre. [9]
For related game cover images, see Category:Dune (franchise) media cover images. Media in category " Dune (franchise) video game screenshots" The following 5 files are in this category, out of 5 total.
Dune was commercially successful, with sales of 20,000 units in its first week alone. By 1997, it had sold 300,000 units. [13] Cryo Interactive's Philippe Ulrich later noted that the company had "bet a lot on the explosion of the PC and the CD-ROM" with Dune, and that the game's hit status was heavily responsible for Cryo's quick growth. [14]
Video games related to the Dune universe created by Frank Herbert. Pages in category "Video games based on Dune (franchise)" The following 7 pages are in this category, out of 7 total.
Dune: Spice Wars is a 4X real-time strategy video game developed by Shiro Games and published by Funcom. In the game, the player tries to dominate the planet of Arrakis diplomatically or militarily. The title is set in the Dune universe, it was released in early access in April 2022 and was fully released in September 2023.
Emperor: Battle for Dune is a real-time strategy video game, released by Westwood Studios in June 2001. It is based in Frank Herbert 's science fiction Dune universe . It follows its predecessors, Dune II and Dune 2000 .
Dune 2000 is a real-time strategy video game, developed by Intelligent Games and published by Westwood Studios in 1998 for Microsoft Windows. It was later ported to the PlayStation in 1999. [4] It is a partial remake of Dune II, which is loosely based on Frank Herbert's Dune universe. [5]
An early real-time strategy game, it predates the genre-popularizing Dune II. It was released first in Japan in 1989 and worldwide in 1990. [ 1 ] It is the sequel to Herzog , which was available on the Japanese MSX and PC-8801 personal computers.