The first entry in a trilogy of budget titles that, when combined, contain all the maps from previous PC releases on Lord Monarch with a lower difficulty level and other extras.
Mission CD features three new eight-mission single-player campaigns, ten new maps for single-player mode, ten new maps for multiplayer mode, enhanced AI for computer controlled races, and a map editor.
The sequel to Man of War adds improved 3D graphics, allowing you to walk around your ship in a first person perspective. Your task is to command the ship, dictating what your crew is doing - repair work, navigation, preparation for battle and preparation for boarding other ships have to be balanced. Different ranks change the way you play the campaigns.
Campaigns include The Wooden Walls of England (fight as the British in the Anglo-French wars in the Channel) or John Paul Jones (where you play the hero role, and lead the American Navy). There are also 20 smaller campaigns to play through. A few distinct multiplayer modes exist to to challenge your mates, and answer the age-old question "Who is the best captain?" A scenario editor completes the package.
Real-time strategy in a setting of World War II, a mix between Cannon Fodder and Commandos. Game contains several missions in which a player commands a group of soldiers with different specialities.
After the death of its emperor the Hesperian Empire breaks down and four races fight for the leadership. Each faction - Giants, Mages, Druids and Pygmies - can be played in their campaigns consisting of 20 missions. The missions goals are usually to destroy or protect something.
The units have special abilities and an inventory to store items like potions, money or spells which are left behind from defeated enemies. They also can be upgraded by moving them in the appropriate building (e.g. a blacksmith) and spending money. There is no classical base building.
A real-time strategy game "Mech Frontier-Urgent Command! Secure Planetary Resources-" features a fierce battle for resource acquisition with hostile forces taking place on a planet in the near future.
As a development commander, the player builds plants for various purposes such as mining and processing resources, supplying energy, and maintaining and repairing robots on the planet, and carrying out the task of sending mined resources to the earth.
Can you accomplish this mission by overcoming the many obstacles that stand in your way?
StarCraft: Stellar Forces was an unauthorized expansion pack for StarCraft, developed and published by Micro Star. It was published on May 1, 1998 and recalled a few weeks after release. The game featured 22 single player maps, 32 multiplayer maps and the ability to compete over the Internet or by a local area network.
StarCraft: Stratospace was an unauthorized expansion to StarCraft, released in 1998. It features 3 campaigns spread over 20 missions, and 999 multiplayer maps.
Ares is a sci-fi real-time strategy action game developed by Nathan Lamont from Bigger Planet Software and published by Changeling Software in 1998 for Mac OS 9. Nathan didn't earn any profit from the sales of the game, due to Changeling's poor marketing. Changeling Software became defunct later that year, so Nathan modified Ares and re-released it as shareware by Ambrosia Software in 1999. Thanks to Ambrosia's marketing efforts, the game became successful and reached its peak in the late 1990s.
In 2008, Nathan Lamont released the original source code to Ares under the GNU GPL 2.0, and most of the media under the CC Attribution-Noncommercial-Share Alike license. This has produced Antares, which is a port of Ares for Mac OS X and Linux.
The player takes the role of Richard Burton, the nineteenth century explorer. The game begins with a cinematic sequence showing what happens to Burton after he has died – how he comes to enter Riverworld.
Riverworld is a real-time strategy game, similar to Microsoft's Age Of Empires. Although Burton is the central character, it is seen from a third-person perspective, and other people within the game can be moved and controlled.
In 1998 the GSC Game World studio tried to introduce itself to the Western video gaming market by making its first real-time strategy game. For that, the developers decided to make their own sequel to Warcraft II, using their own engine that would be used later for the Cossack games.
StarCraft: Insurrection (also known as Insurrection: Campaigns for StarCraft) is an expansion pack to StarCraft video game with new campaign missions and multiplayer maps.
The final game in the Madou Monogatari series, featuring the classic characters most players are probably more familiar with from the "Puyo Puyo" series and featuring the Lovecraftian deity Yog Sothoth as the primary antagonist.