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.
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 ...
Video games that take place in Russia during all three major eras of its existence (Russian Empire, Soviet Union, and Russian Federation Subcategories. This category ...
A large skirmish battle between NATO and Soviet troops. World in Conflict focuses on real-time tactics (RTT) gameplay, in a similar manner to Ground Control, a game also developed by Massive Entertainment, [8] in which players deploy units onto a battlefield and must carefully make use of them to achieve victory, making use of support assets to further assist them.
Freedom Fighters is a 2003 third-person shooter video game for the PlayStation 2, GameCube, Xbox, and Windows. It was developed by IO Interactive and published by Electronic Arts. [2] The game is set in an alternate history in which the Soviet Union has invaded and occupied New York City.
The game uses a point and click system for the player to direct unit actions, such as movement and deployment. Unlike real-time strategy games which are similar in design, Stalingrad only allows the player to command pre-existing units already placed on the map - units lost cannot be replaced, as the game does not have a unit creation or base building system.
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 ...