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Video games about or set in the Battle of Britain and The Blitz. Pages in category "Battle of Britain video games" The following 13 pages are in this category, out of 13 total.
Wings of Glory is a World War I combat flight simulator video game for DOS, developed by Origin Systems and published by Electronic Arts in 1995. The game uses Origin's RealSpace engine, which was first used in their earlier flight simulator Strike Commander .
Battle of Britain was developed by TalonSoft and was designed by Gary Grigsby and Keith Brors. [3] The pair had previously co-created the Steel Panthers series at Strategic Simulations Inc. (SSI), but had left the company in late 1997 to join TalonSoft, with the stated goal of making a wargame based on the Battle of Britain. [4]
The Battle of Britain [13] Rene Vidmer/Deadly Games 1991 Battle Commercial 7 or higher Battle Girl: Feral Interactive: 1999 Retro arcade Commercial Battle Snake: Game Training 2011 Arcade/action Freeware 10.6.6 or higher Battle Squadron: Cope-Com 1990 Shoot-em up Commercial Battle vs. Chess: Targem Games/Gaijin Entertainment 2011 Board game ...
Battle of Britain II: Wings of Victory is a Windows-based World War II combat flight simulator created by Shockwave Productions (currently known as A2A Simulations) and released in 2005. It is a remake of Rowan's Battle of Britain. [1] [2] A cut-down version without the campaign was released in 2007, titled Air Battles: Sky Defender. [3]
The game was remade twice, first in 2005 as Battle of Britain II: Wings of Victory by Shockwave Productions, Inc., [12] [13] and again in 2007 as Air Battles: Sky Defender by Wild Hare Entertainment, a modified version of the above game with a more arcade-style gameplay. [14]
Combat Wings (2005) Combat Wings: Battle for Britain (2006) Combat Wings: The Great Battles of World War II (2012) Dogfight 1942 (2012) Dogfight 1942: Russia Under Siege (2012) (1st DLC) Dogfight 1942: Fire Over Africa (2012) (2nd DLC)
The game was designed by Gary Grigsby and Keith Brors. [1] The game reuses the game engine and interface from Grigsby's previous game with TalonSoft, Battle of Britain. [2] Battle of Britain had marked Grigsby's return to the air-combat wargame format, which he had not attempted since U.S.A.A.F. - United States Army Air Force. [3]