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Dragon Ball Z: Dokkan Battle (Japanese: ドラゴンボールZ ドッカンバトル) is a free-to-play mobile game based on the Dragon Ball anime franchise. Developed by Akatsuki and published by Bandai Namco Entertainment , it was released in Japan for Android on January 30, 2015 and for iOS on February 18, 2015. [ 1 ]
Windows: 1998 The Ancient Art of War in the Skies: MS-DOS, Amiga, Atari ST: 1992 ATAC: The Secret War Against Drugs: MS-DOS 1992 Developed by Argonaut Games Autoduel [a] Amiga, Apple II, Atari 8-bit, Atari ST, Commodore 64, MS-DOS, Macintosh: 1985 Avalon Hill's Diplomacy [b] 1999 Avalon Hill's Squad Leader [b] 2000 B-17 Flying Fortress: MS-DOS ...
The tool is marketed as allowing users to create 3D games without programming and art skills. Games developed with 3D Gamemaker require at least 400 MHz Pentium processor, 64 MB of RAM and DirectX 7.0b [8] to run. Alongside the full boxed release, The 3D Gamemaker was also released in a Lite edition, with fewer categories of assets available ...
Dragon Ball Xenoverse (Japanese: ドラゴンボールゼノバース, Hepburn: Doragon Bōru Zenobāsu) is an action role-playing fighting game based on the Dragon Ball franchise developed by Dimps and published by Bandai Namco Games. [5]
Dragon Ball Z: Idainaru Son Goku Densetsu (ドラゴンボールZ 偉大なる孫悟空伝説, Doragon Bōru Z Idainaru Son Gokū Densetsu, Dragon Ball Z: The Greatest Son Goku Legend) was released for the PC Engine (the Japanese version of the TurboGrafx-16) on November 11, 1994 (). It features Gohan telling Goten of the battles of their ...
2D Fighter Maker 2nd (FM2K or 2DK) was released by ASCII's successor company, Enterbrain. An update to the original version, FM2K allowed for a greater amount of expansion and extension than FM95, revising much of the original engine to allow more options while adding a menu-based system for clarity.
Version 7.0 was the first to emerge under this partnership. The first macOS compatible version of program was released in 2009, [40] allowing games to be made for two operating systems with minimal changes. Version 8.1 (April 2011) sees the name changed to GameMaker (lacking a space) to avoid any confusion [41] with the 1991 software Game-Maker.
Game-Maker (aka RSD Game-Maker) is an MS-DOS-based suite of game design tools, accompanied by demonstration games, produced between 1991 and 1995 by the Amherst, New Hampshire based Recreational Software Designs and sold through direct mail in the US by KD Software. [1]