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Nuclear Strike is a shooter video game developed and published by Electronic Arts for the PlayStation in 1997. The game is the sequel to Soviet Strike and the fifth installment in the Strike series, which began with Desert Strike on the Sega Genesis. The Soviet Strike development team also created Nuclear Strike.
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Strike is a series of video games created by Mike Posehn, John Patrick Manley and Tony Barnes released between 1991 and 1997 by Electronic Arts for a number of video game systems. The games are multi-directional shooters viewed from an overhead or top-down perspective.
Nuclear War is a single player turn-based strategy game developed by New World Computing and released for the Amiga in 1989 and later for MS-DOS. It presents a satirical , cartoonish nuclear battle between five world powers, in which the winner is whoever retains some population when everyone else on earth is dead.
Computer and Video Games agreed with a reader that Blast Corps was part of a "Destroy" subgenre including games like Desert Strike, Return Fire, and Body Harvest, [25] and Matt Fox of The Video Games Guide put the game in a lineage with Highway Encounter and Lunar Jetman. [26] Slo Mo said it was "like Pilotwings with a kamikaze twist. It's a ...
A new game, Nuclear War Simulator, is intended to allow people to experience the full horror of modern warfare. The game lets people create their own nuclear weapons, direct them at places on the ...
Pages in category "Video games about nuclear war and weapons" The following 72 pages are in this category, out of 72 total. This list may not reflect recent changes .
The result was Gulf Strike, the first wargame published by Victory in 1983, featuring cover art by Ted Koller. [2] The following year, Avalon Hill published a video game based on the board game, programmed for several popular platforms of the time: Apple II, Atari 8-bit, Commodore 64, and DOS. [3]