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Mac OS, Mac OS X Casady & Greene: When Casady & Greene went bankrupt, the rights to the series reverted to the author, John Calhoun, who opted to give a few versions of the game away for free on his website. God of Thunder: 1993 [53] Puzzle, Action DOS Adept Software: Gridlee: 1983 Arcade Videa Gridrunner: 1982 Scrolling shooter
Linux, Mac OS (requires manual compilation), Windows: Improves AssaultCube. Single/Multiplayer. Black Shades: Wolfire games 2001 Linux, OS X, Windows, Mac OS, iOS: Wolfire Games: Freeware: Free First-person shooter BZFlag: Chris Schoeneman, Tim Riker 1993 2022-11-20 (2.4.26) Linux, BSD, OS X, Windows, other UNIX: GNU LGPL: Tank combat Chub Gam ...
Apeiron is a Macintosh game developed and released as shareware by Ambrosia Software. An adaptation of the 1980 arcade game Centipede , [ 2 ] it was first released on February 11, 1995. [ 3 ] In November 2004, a Mac OS X port was made available.
Splinter Software 1998 Board game Commercial 7–8 Agitate: Splinter Software 1998 Board game Commercial 7 AGON (Ancient Games of Nations) Viva Media 2003 Adventure Commercial aGORA: Soul of the Oracle: Knowble Design 1998 Action RPG Commercial 7.5.5–9 Air Assault: Air Attack II: Jeff Miller 1988 Arcade Commercial 6–9 Air Hockey ...
Munkki believed that it could be fun to allow the game to evolve by letting other shareware/freeware authors work on it, so he posted an article on comp.sys.mac.games inviting others to develop the game however they wanted. Andrew Welch, the president of Ambrosia software saw this article, leading to Avara becoming an Ambrosia title.
EV Nova is a Carbon application and runs natively on both the original Mac OS and Mac OS X, and has been ported to Windows. Version 1.1.0 of EV Nova, released in December 2008, is a Universal Binary, and runs natively on Intel-based Macs. Adapted versions of the scenarios of the first two games that run natively in EV Nova are available for free.
Maelstrom was released when there were few action games for the high-resolution color displays of the Macintosh, and the game attracted attention despite the dated concept. The response led Welch to start Ambrosia Software. The game was later released as free and open-source software, resulting in ports for other platforms.
They decided on native versions of their games, rather than emulations, and that any games purchased over Steam for computers running Windows would be available for free download to computers running Mac OS X, and vice versa. The first game to be released simultaneously for Mac and Windows by Valve was Portal 2 in April 2011. [50]