Wraith is a fantasy role-playing game like the author's previous effort Shadowforge, although it's set in a larger, more detailed world with an updated and expanded rule system. The worship of Metiria is being subverted all over the realm of Araithia; lords and commoners have turned their devotion to a newly-arrived evil power, the Wraith, whose monstrous armies now infest the island. You, guardian of the last Temple of the True Faith, are summoned to seek out and eliminate this evil.
A band of fearless dungeon crawlers must seek out The Dragon Sword and confront the dragon Oijngate. The Dragon Sword is the fabled sword which has the power to defeat a powerful creature like Oijngate.
The Dragon Sword is an RPG similar to the Wizardry series of games. You will explore large maps which you view in the first person and fight monsters in turn-based combat. You will create characters by giving them names and choosing their race and class and picking from randomly generated attributes. Then your selected group will dive right into the adventure.
Monster encounters pop up unexpectedly so be ready to fight at any time. Your warrior and mêlée class characters can use an array of weapons against foes while magic casters can likewise use an array of magical spells and weapons. Once in a while you will run into a store where you'll be able to use collected gold and items to trade and purchase items of your choosing.
The thirty levels that you will battle through will not only present combat but will al
Silmar is a rogue-like/hack type of RPG, with random generated dungeons, in which you as an adventurer are descending to fight monsters and find treasure. The game was first released for DOS around 1990, with later incarnations running on Windows, Linux and OS/X.
The DOS version has tile-based graphics, and was split in three parts. The first (Dungeons of Silmar) was distributed as shareware, and the second (An Everpresent Magic) and third (The Forward Terminus) parts were made available with the purchase of the first part.
The story is that the evil wizard Syrilboltus was defeated in a war with a dwarf country called Gormarundon, but left a cursed magic labyrinth of dungeons under his tower, crawling with monsters, nearby the village Silmarii, which needs to be cleansed and sealed by reaching the bottom of the dungeons. Many adventurers have tried but failed, and now you are to try your luck.
You choose your character from a list of mixed characters, ranging from werewolves to baseball players (oh, the horror!)
Lost Souls is a MUD, a free text-based multi-player online RPG (role-playing game). The theme of the setting is medieval fantasy, with elements drawn from a wide variety of sources alongside entirely original content. Your character in the game battles monsters, develops skills, advances in ability, pursues quests, and explores the wide, detailed world.
Lost Souls was founded in 1990, and has been under continuous development for thirty-two years. While many MUDs regard themselves as essentially finished works, Lost Souls takes pride in always working to improve its technology and design, reinventing the game experience continually.
After the quite successful "Wall Street Wizard", the young German software house Lifetimes has now tried its hand again at a business simulation. As with Starbyte's "Transworld", it's all about the mysterious world of the freight forwarding business.
Instead of finding one's way in the hectic hustle and bustle of the stock exchange, this time one is supposed to direct the captains of the road. Up to six players (the Amiga replaces the missing one) can take part in the attempt to dominate the transport market in Europe.
This is "Fire!" for the Amstrad CPC released back in 1990 by New Deal Productions and developed by Luc Guillaume(code) and Elie Daniel(music).
It's another simple shooter in which you control a helicopter and all you have to do is to fly left or right, engage enemy planes and gun emplacements and destroy the with your rockets. Keep an eye on your fuel and shields because losing one of these your helicopter will become a ball of fire!
Shooting Gallery is a simple game for DOS simulating a shooting gallery. You control mainly with the mouse to aim and try to hit targets to score points.
The game is divided into 7 rounds where each round has a different shooting game or a little bit more difficult version of a previous round.
Round 7 is always the Shootout which is a race against time to shoot as many badies as you can before the time limit runs out.
The Talking Ghostbusters II/Ghostbusters II is a handheld game (referred in boxed releases as a Electronic LCD Game) that was was released by Micro Games of America (also going by Micro Games USA briefly) in 1990. The game has variant releases, though it appears that the actual game and device layout don't change in any variants.