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  2. Cytadela (video game) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cytadela_(video_game)

    Cytadela or Citadel [1] is a 1995 first-person shooter developed by Virtual Design and published by Black Legend and Arrakis Software for the Amiga 500 and later. [2] [3] The game is set on a prison island in the middle of a prisoner revolt. [4] [5] The game received generally positive reviews in the Amiga press.

  3. Superior Software - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Superior_Software

    The original Play It Again Sam featured four Superior games (Citadel, Thrust, Ravenskull, and Stryker's Run), while subsequent compilations increasingly featured games licensed from other software houses such as Micro Power or Alligata. These compilations also occasionally included some new games that were thought to be not quite up to the ...

  4. Citadel 2 - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Citadel_2

    Citadel 2 is a BBC Micro game developed by Symo for Superior Software.The sequel to Citadel, it is a platform game with puzzle solving elements. Like the original, the game's plot involves finding five gems hidden in various locations in a large fort, together with areas outside it (including mines, three trees, a lodge and a floating sky castle) and destroying them in a teleporter hidden at ...

  5. Citadel (video game) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Citadel_(video_game)

    Citadel is a computer game developed by Michael Jakobsen for the BBC Micro, and released by Superior Software in 1985. It was also ported to the Acorn Electron . Centred around a castle, this platform game with some puzzle-solving elements requires players to find five hidden crystals and return them to their rightful place.

  6. Watara Supervision - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Watara_Supervision

    The Watara Supervision's main marketing point was its low price; the Supervision was US$49.95 in 1992 [2] while the Game Boy was US$89.99. [3] Games for the Supervision were also much cheaper than Game Boy games, [2] and advertisements emphasized this price difference, with one British ad for the Supervision calling it "the affordable hand-held games machine". [4]

  7. Power (game) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Power_(game)

    Power (also Power+) is a closed-end, computer-moderated, play-by-mail space-based game of intrigue. It was published by Entertainment Concepts Inc. (ECI). By late 1985, an updated version of the game, Power+, had replaced Power. Gameplay involved 40 players vying for rulership of a space empire comprising 35 planets.

  8. List of Activision video games - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_Activision_video_games

    List of Activision games: 2010–2019; List of Activision games: 2020–present; List of Activision Value games This page was last edited on 9 November 2024, at 18:14 ...

  9. Absolute Power (game) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Absolute_Power_(game)

    The game launched in 1996. [2] By 2000, Jade Enterprises was publishing the game. [1] It was mixed-moderated and open-ended. [3] Nicky Palmer thought the game a mix between Where Lies the Power and En Garde. [4] By 2002, the publisher had revised the game to Absolute Power 2. [2] It was then published by Alan Crump of Silver Dreamer. [2]