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Video games about the end of the universe (3 P) Pages in category "End of the universe in fiction" The following 11 pages are in this category, out of 11 total.
The Survivalist series: Jerry Ahern: First book 1981, Total War: Game 1981 War Aftermath! Game from Fantasy Games Unlimited: Novel series 1981 War The Pelbar Cycle: Paul O. Williams: Seven-book series. First book The Breaking of Northwall (1981); a thousand years after a series of nuclear exchanges. Re-published in 2005.
Viriconium is the capital city in which much of the action takes place. Viriconium lies on a dying Earth littered with the detritus of the millennia, seemingly now its own hermetic universe where chronology no longer applies. [4] Michael Moorcock – The Dancers at the End of Time series (1972–6). [5] Hideyuki Kikuchi – Vampire Hunter D series
In the far future long after star formation has ceased the universe will be populated by sparse degenerate remnants, mostly white dwarfs, though their ultimate fate is an open question. A time ...
The books have been reprinted a number of times as a trilogy (as well as many times separately): in 1986 by Ballantine Books as "Galactic Empire Novel[s]", in 1992 by Spectra as "The Empire Novels" and in 2010 along with The End of Eternity by Orb Books, in both print and Kindle editions.
The other books in the series included The Fold (2015), Dead Moon (2018), and Terminus (2020). Although 14 and The Fold were published both as paperbacks and audio books, Dead Moon began as an Audible exclusive and after its initial run on Audible, it was published as an e-book while Terminus has been published exclusively as an Audible Original .
Pages in category "Novels about the end of the universe" The following 16 pages are in this category, out of 16 total. This list may not reflect recent changes .
The name "Revelation Space universe" has been used by Alastair Reynolds in both the introductory text in the collections Diamond Dogs, Turquoise Days and Galactic North, and also on several editions of the novels set in the universe. He considered calling it the "Exordium universe" after a key plot device, but found that the name was already in ...