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The game's genre is "friendship adventures for girls", which Wired deemed to be a new game category created by Brenda Laurel, Purple Moon's co-founder. [1] The game's design was built on the notion of girls not wanting to play as a superhero, rather as a friend, experiencing real-life events, encounters, and emotions that they would understand ...
Perestroika (also known as Toppler) is a Soviet video game released in 1990 by a small software developer called Locis (Nikita Skripkin, Aleksander Okrug and Dmitry Chikin, currently - Nikita online [1]) in 1990, and named after Soviet leader Mikhail Gorbachev's policy of Perestroika.
Nikita Online is a Russian publisher and developer of online games. Founded in 1991 and originally named NIKITA, it became the first Russian game company. [dubious – discuss] Currently Nikita Online operates with 19 titles in Russia, CIS and Baltic States.
Allods Online is a fantasy multiplayer online role-playing game based on the famous Allods/Rage of Mages series of games. [7] Along with the typical MMORPG activity (fighting monsters, completing quests, improving the characteristics of your character, etc.), Allods Online features the so-called Astral travels, a unique concept that gives players the opportunity to build and pilot their own ...
Madeline is a series of educational point-and-click adventure video games which were developed during the mid-1990s for Windows and Mac systems. [1] [2] The games are an extension of the Madeline series of children's books by Ludwig Bemelmans, which describe the adventures of a young French girl.
Pages in category "Video games developed in Russia" The following 200 pages are in this category, out of approximately 293 total. This list may not reflect recent changes .
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Girls' video games are a genre of video games developed for young girls, mainly in the 1990s. [ 1 ] [ 2 ] The attempts in this period by several developers to specifically target girls, which they considered underserved by a video games industry mainly attempting to cater to boys' tastes, are also referred to as the "girls' games movement."