History of video games/Open games
Intro
Open Source games are interesting from a historical point of view, because they allow the examination of a codebase and development cycle over time.
Nethack
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Nethack received its first release in 1987. -
Falcon's Eye, a graphical remake of Nethack from 1999.
Battle for Wesnoth
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Battle for Wesnoth in 2003 -
Battle for Wesnoth in 2008 -
Battle for Wesnoth in 2015
Neverball
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Neverball in 2006 -
Neverball in 2014 -
Neverball in 2019
StepMania
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StepMania neoMAX2 in 2009 -
StepMania 5 in 2011 -
StepMania running on an arcade machine around 2011
0 A.D.
Read more about 0 A.D. in its Wikibook.
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0 A.D. in 2015 -
0 A.D. in 2019 -
0 A.D. in 2021
BZ Flag
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BZFlag in 2005 -
BZFlag in 2010
Super TuxKart
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Tuxkart 0.4.0 released in 2004 -
SuperTuxKart in 0.7 2010 -
SuperTuxKart 0.8 in 2013 -
SuperTuxKart 0.9 in 2015 -
SuperTuxKart 0.9.3 Splitscreen multiplayer in 2017 -
SuperTuxKart in 2018
Cube
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AssaultCube in 2006 -
Cube 2: Sauerbraten in 2011
Minetest
In 2011 the first early release (0.2.20110731_3) of Minetest was posted to Github.[1]
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Minetest in 2016 -
Minetest in 2020
Nexuiz & Xonotic
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Nexuiz beta in 2004 -
Nexuiz in 2005 -
Nexuiz in 2006 -
Nexuiz in 2008 -
Xonotic in 2019
Other Open Source and Free Software Games
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.kkrieger in 2004 -
Lincity NG in 2005 -
Yo Frankie! in 2008 -
Frets on Fire in 2009 -
Warsow in 2012 -
Secret Maryo Chronicles in 2013
References
- ↑ "Release 0.2.20110731_3 · minetest/minetest". GitHub. Retrieved 12 December 2020.