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This is a list of games that supported the online functionality of the Sony PlayStation 2 video game console. Many games have been brought back due to servers run and operated by fans such as PS2Online and the SOCOM Community server.
Instead of having a unified online service such as Xbox Live, online multiplayer on the PS2 was the responsibility of the game publisher and was run on third-party servers. However, later PS2 online games required the console to be authorized through Sony's Dynamic Network Authentication System (DNAS) before connecting to the server.
There was no unified service and thus no official name so it was often referred to as PS2 Network Play, PS2 Network Gaming, PS2 Online, or Net Play in the PAL region. Because of this any online functionality was the responsibility of the game publisher and was run on third-party servers.
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Dikembe Mutombo's 4 ½ Weeks to Save the World. With an indie game star (and Canabalt creator) like Adam Saltsman, even an Old Spice marketing stunt can make for one helluva browser game.
Central Station (also known as Network Gaming Service) was an online service operated by Sony Computer Entertainment Europe in PAL regions for the PlayStation 2. The service allowed users to have friend lists, view new game releases, read the latest PlayStation-related news, enter events, and play Central Station-integrated online games for the ...
PlayOnline was originally conceived as an all-in-one solution to house multiple types of game content. [1] At the "Square Millennium" event in Japan in January 2000, Square announced Final Fantasy IX, X and XI, with the last scheduled to release in the summer of 2001, and that they had been working on an online portal called PlayOnline with Japanese telecom company NTT Communications, which ...
This is a selected list of multiplayer browser games.These games are usually free, with extra, payable options sometimes available. The game flow of the games may be either turn-based, where players are given a number of "turns" to execute their actions or real-time, where player actions take a real amount of time to complete.