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Video games set in the Viking Age (61 P) Pages in category "Video games based on Norse mythology" The following 97 pages are in this category, out of 97 total.
Pages in category "Video games set in the Viking Age" The following 61 pages are in this category, out of 61 total. This list may not reflect recent changes. A.
Inspired by Nordic mythology, Northgard is a real-time strategy game where a Viking clan tries to take control over a wild continent. The game contains both single-player and multi-player modes, as well as a story-based campaign, with missions of increasing difficulty and complexity.
Ancestor's Legacy offers two game modes: a single-player campaign scenario or a multiplayer game, in which the player can choose to play one of four civilizations: Vikings, Anglo-Saxons, Teutons, or Slavs [5] (the Saladin's Conquest DLC adds a fifth civilization, the Saracens). The game features a day/night cycle which changes the way factions ...
An in-game screenshot. In the main play area are the three playable characters (l-r): Olaf the Stout, Baleog the Fierce, and Erik the Swift. The Lost Vikings is a side-scrolling platform adventure where the player alternates control of the three Viking characters, guiding each of them one at a time (though control may be swapped from character to character at any point) from a designated start ...
Saga: Rage of the Vikings is a French real-time strategy video game developed and published by Cryo Interactive in 1998 on Windows. The game is loosely based on the historical Vikings (or Norsemen), with various elements taken from the Norse mythology as well. The gameplay sees players gather resources, constructing buildings and training units ...
A Viking family becomes shipwrecked on an island named Vinland, a reference to the historical Vinland settlement in North America. As they attempt to survive in the wilderness, the warlord Bjorn demands they give him tribute. Players control the four Viking family members, each of whom has their own skills, as in role-playing video games.
The reviewer felt most gamers would be turned off by the dated graphics and "lack of plot, puzzles, music," and "non-player character interactions" but recommended the game to "more-conservative D&D types" who would relish the game's difficulty and "well-developed gaming system." [3] Computer Game Review rated Ragnarok 80% overall. The three ...