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The Mini TSFO (Training Set, Fire Observation) was the first artillery call-for-fire simulation designed for the personal computer.It was started in 1985 as an outgrowth of a Field Artillery Officer Advanced Course battlefield research project at the U.S. Army Field Artillery School (USAFAS) to develop a concept for incorporating PCs into artillery training, and was completed in 1986.
Delta Force is a tactical first-person shooter developed and published by NovaLogic. [3] It was released for the Windows in October 1998. Delta Force was designed to be a military simulation loosely based on the United States' Delta Force special operations army unit.
Sierra Entertainment is a software label which publishes games from indie developers. Founded in 1979 by Ken and Roberta Williams , it developed and published a large variety of video games, including a number of best-selling games and series, for various platforms between 1980 and 2008.
Emergency (video game series) Emergency (video game) Emergency 2: The Ultimate Fight for Life; Emergency 3: Mission Life; Emergency 4: Global Fighters for Life; Emergency 5; Emergency Fire Response; Emergency Heroes; Emergency Mayhem
Scorched Earth is a shareware artillery video game.It was released for MS-DOS in 1991, originally written by Wendell Hicken using Borland C++ and Turbo Assembler. [2] Players control tanks to do turn-based battle in two-dimensional terrain, adjusting the angle and power of each tank turret before each shot.
The game sold nearly 1 million copies for Xbox and PC. [2] Full Spectrum Warrior became the subject of some controversy shortly after it was released. The two primary complaints aired were that the United States Army was not using their training version of the game because it was not "realistic enough". [35]
List of 4X video games; List of artillery video games; List of grand strategy video games; List of massively multiplayer online real-time strategy games; List of massively multiplayer online turn-based strategy games; List of multiplayer online battle arena video games; List of real-time strategy video games; List of real-time tactics video games
Dragonfire is a 1982 video game written by Bob Smith and published by Imagic. [1] The player grabs treasure guarded by a dragon while avoiding fireballs. It was originally released for the Atari 2600 then ported to the Intellivision, VIC-20, Commodore 64, Apple II, ZX Spectrum, ColecoVision, and TRS-80 Color Computer.