Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
Red Heat (video game) Red Orchestra 2: Heroes of Stalingrad; Red Skies Over Europe; Rising Storm (video game) Road to Moscow; Rocky Balboa (video game) Rocky Legends; Rogue Warrior (video game) Rush'n Attack; Russia: The Great War in the East 1941–1945
Pages in category "Video games developed in the Soviet Union" The following 5 pages are in this category, out of 5 total. This list may not reflect recent changes.
Crisis in the Kremlin is a 1991 strategy video game with managerial aspects in which the player acts as General Secretary of the Communist Party of the Soviet Union from 1985 to 2017. [3] The player assumes the role of the reformist Mikhail Gorbachev , the nationalist Boris Yeltsin , or the hardliner Yegor Ligachyov . [ 4 ]
KGB is a video game released for the Amiga and IBM PC compatibles in 1992. Set in the decadent final days of the Soviet Union, KGB is considered to be quite difficult, even for experienced gamers, since it relies on a real time clock and correct/wrong answers which can end the game immediately or after an event needed to be triggered; also, players may make errors which they will notice only ...
The game is, alongside You Are Empty (2006) and the games in the Metro 2033 series, one the games set in and around the Moscow Metro system. It takes place in 1952 in Moscow in the Soviet Union, under Joseph Stalin who has been in power for over 30 years. The game focuses on a fictional internal plot against Stalin and the Soviet government.
It was a success, and at the Origins Awards in 1987, it was a finalist for the Charles S. Roberts Award for "Best World War II Board Game of 1986." [2] Using the same rules system with the addition of more advanced options, Chadwick expanded the game to cover the entire German-Soviet conflict, and released it as The Great Patriotic War in 1988.
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.
Nuclear Union (Russian: Новый Союз / Novyy Soyuz, actually meaning "New Union") is a cancelled post-apocalyptic role-playing video game.It was developed by the Ukrainian company Best Way, and supposed to be funded and published by the Russian publisher 1C Company, [1] [2] to be released in 2014 for Microsoft Windows, but the latter pulled its involvement at the end of 2013 due to the ...