Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
During the game's campaign on Steam Greenlight, users raised concerns about the game but the game's developers defended the controversial "Slave Tetris" mode. [3] After the game was released on Steam, several years after its original release date, a large number of users complained that the game trivialized slavery. [ 4 ]
Pages in category "Video games about slavery" The following 28 pages are in this category, out of 28 total. This list may not reflect recent changes. A.
The game was created by Serious Games as an edutainment title to teach the user about slave trading. One game mode in the title was called "Slave Tetris", with the goal to try to fit as many African slaves on a boat as possible, using gameplay similar to Tetris; the developer had intended to show how inhumane the slave traders were, and how ...
Freedom! is a 1992 educational video game for the Apple II developed and published by the Minnesota Educational Computing Consortium (MECC). Based on similar gameplay from MECC's earlier The Oregon Trail, the player assumes the role of a runaway slave in the antebellum period of American history who is trying to reach the North through the Underground Railroad.
Its first planned release date was the time on WWF television when "Dr. Death" Steve Williams was getting a midcard push, where he was managed by a heel Jim Ross. The official strategy guide of WWF Attitude makes mention of this, [ 15 ] and "JR's boy" is a chant in the game, referencing the midcard storyline. [ 16 ]
The game was released as an online video game in 2006. [2] [1] Russian game developer Akella published the game for release on September 18, [citation needed] while Ubisoft published the game on November 16. [5] A later agreement with Discovery Channel and Animal Planet brought the game to Europe, where it was published by Xplosiv on April 5, 2007.
In 2008 Sony put up an official website for the game. [8] Soon after a game description was posted on the Japanese retailer Gamestar's website with a trailer indicating the game was about a photojournalist. [9] [10] The U.S. version of Afrika was announced at E3 2009. The game's North American release date was October 6, 2009. [1]
In 1967, the secret international organization Unity, whose purpose is to protect the world from megalomaniacs, discovers over half of their elite agents killed by Dmitrij Volkov, a Russian assassin working for the terrorist organization H.A.R.M. Unity's leaders, Jones and Smith, bring up Cate Archer, a novice and the first female Unity agent, and her mentor Bruno Lawrie to investigate H.A.R.M.