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Rise in popularity and diversity

SuperTux

Individuals and teams have continued creating many popular free software games, starting really in the late 1990s to the present day. Many of these are clones[1] such as Pingus, Lix,[2] and Rabbit Escape[3] (Lemmings), BomberClone (Atomic Bomberman),[4] Enigma (Oxyd), Beats of Rage (Streets of Rage), TetriNET (Tetris), GAV,[5] Blobby Volley, and SlimeVolley[6] (Arcade Volleyball), Ace of Penguins (Microsoft Solitaire),[7] Crack Attack (Tetris Attack),[8] Pang Zero[9] and PiX Pang[10] (Super Pang), System Syzygy (Systems' Twilight),[11] Troll Bridge, Fanwor: The Legend of Gemda[12] and ZQuest Classic[13] (The Legend of Zelda), Rocks'n'Diamonds and Epiphany[14] (Boulder Dash), Numpty Physics (Crayon Physics),[15] Pathological (Logical),[16] PainTown (MUGEN),[17] FloboPoyo,[18] GTK Puyo Puyo[19] (Puyo Puyo), Paranoid,[20] LBreakOut 2,[21] and Briquolo[22] (Breakout), BurgerSpace (BurgerTime),[23] Einstein Puzzle (Sherlock),[24] UltraStar (SingStar), OpenClonk (Clonk), FreeGish (Gish),[25] Hexoshi (Super Metroid),[26] I Have No Tomatoes[27] and Bombic[28] (Dynablaster), Scorched 3D and XScorch[29] (Scorched Earth), FreeVikings (The Lost Vikings),[30] Savage Wheels (Destruction Derby),[31] Penguin Command (Missile Command),[32] Sable (Space Harrier),[33] Circus Linux! (Circus Atari),[34] Falling Time (Fall Down),[35] Toppler (Tower Toppler),[36][37] Gem Drop X (Gem Drop),[38] Fish Supper[39] and Froggix[40] (Frogger), OpenMortal (Mortal Kombat),[41][42] Triplane Turmoil and SDL Sopwth[43] (Sopwith), Taisei Project (Touhou Project),[44] Crown and Cutlass (Sid Meier's Pirates!),[45] IceBreaker (JezzBall),[46] Monsterz (Bejeweled),[47] Tux Football[48] and YSoccer[49] (Sensible Soccer), iMaze (MIDI Maze),[50] PixBros (Bubble Bobble),[51] Surge the Rabbit (Sonic the Hedgehog),[52] Dave Gnukem (Duke Nukem),[53] Formido[54] (Phobia), Violetland[55] and Grimsonland[56] (Crimsonland), Minetest (Minecraft),[57] SolarWolf (Solar Fox),[58] Freedroid[59] and Nighthawk[60] (Paradroid), Tile World and Escape[61] (Chip's Challenge),[62] FreeOrion (Master of Orion),[63] Tuxánci (Bulánci), Super Tux Party (Mario Party),[64] Neverball (Super Monkey Ball),[65] Kraptor/RafKill (Raptor: Call of the Shadows), Trackballs (Marble Madness),[66] Hurrican (Turrican),[67] OpenTyrian (Tyrian),[68] HexGL (Wipeout),[69] Zaz (Zuma), Ostrich Riders (Joust),[70] Endless Sky[71] and Naev[72] (Escape Velocity), Pioneer and Oolite (Elite), SuperTux, Secret Maryo Chronicles and Mari0 (Super Mario Bros.),[73] SuperTux 3D[74] (Super Mario 64), WarMUX[75] and Hedgewars[76] (Worms), OpenLieroX, NiL,[77] LieroLibre (Liero) as well as Frets on Fire (Guitar Hero), and StepMania (Dance Dance Revolution).

kiki the nanobot

Frozen Bubble, originally a clone of Puzzle Bobble, has become a classic known for its addictive gameplay and winner of many Linux Journal Reader's Choice Awards.[78] These games and others have also helped expand the prevalent Tux genre which started with titles and like A Quest for Herring and are related to the activist content of games like XBill. As well as ground up clones,[79] open source re-implementations of various proprietary games have become increasingly common, which utilize the original game data.[80]

More original games such as the platformers 0verkill,[81] Abe's Amazing Adventure,[82] Adventures on Planet Zephulor,[83] Alex the Allegator 4,[84] Amphetamine,[85] B.A.L.L.Z.,[86] Cow's Revenge,[87] Gilbert and the doors,[88] Go Ollie!,[89] GunFu Deadlands,[90] JVGS,[91] Me and My Shadow,[92] Mr. Rescue,[93] Nikwi,[94] Plee the Bear,[95] Super Bombinhas,[96] Stringrolled,[97] Teeworlds, Which Way Is Up,[98] and Worminator 3,[99] puzzle games such as Anagramarama,[100] Angry, Drunken, Dwarves,[101] Balls Blocks and Mazes,[102] Battery,[103] Brikx,[104] Chroma,[105] Dynamite,[106] Hex-a-Hop,[107] irrlamb,[108] kiki the nano bot, Krystal Drop,[109] Marble Muncher,[110] Memonix,[111] Minilens,[112] Raincat,[113] Tetzle,[114] The Powder Toy, Wizznic!,[115] and Xye,[116] arcade games such as Apricots,[117] Airstrike,[118] Avoision,[119] Battle Tanks,[120] Barrage,[121] C-Dogs, Chromium B.S.U., Emilia Pinball,[122] the Enemy Lines series,[123][124] FLAW,[125] Free Tennis,[126] the Geki series,[127] Hase,[128] Help Hannah's Horse,[129] Heroes,[130] Jammer the Gardener,[131] KETM,[132] Kuklomenos,[133] Librerama,[134] Luola,[135] M.A.R.S.,[136] Meat Fighter - The Weiner Warrior,[36] Hikou no mizu,[137] Moag,[138] OilWar,[139] osu!, Osgg,[140] Orbital Eunuchs Sniper,[141] Overgod,[142] Powermanga,[143][144] Ri-li,[145] Super Transball 2,[146] Technoball Z,[147] The Sheep Killer,[148] Variations on Rockdodger,[149] Warlock's Gauntlet,[150] and Zorn,[151] have been able to carve out their own niches.

A number of these games and those mentioned earlier and later in this section have even received mainstream press coverage[152] and commercial compilations,[153] and have helped to establish free gaming as a moderately popular pastime. Most prominently among Linux[154] users and other free Unix-like systems such as BSD,[155] Solaris,[156] Darwin,[157] ToaruOS,[158] Xv6,[159] Fiwix,[160] Redox,[161] OpenHarmony,[162] and SerenityOS,[163] but also some Macintosh[164] players and even a few Microsoft Windows gamers.[165] As well, open source games have been made available for Palm OS,[166] Android,[167] and iOS[168] mobile devices. Additionally, these games provide options for a variety of alternative and hobbyist systems,[169] including CP/M,[170] OS/2,[171][172] BeOS,[173][174] RISC OS,[175][176][177] QNX,[178] IRIX,[179][180] MenuetOS,[181] Phantom OS,[182] Genode,[183] HelenOS,[184] SkyOS,[185] TempleOS,[186] SymbOS,[187][188] FreeRTOS,[189] AmigaOS[190][191] (plus WarpOS[192]), and MorphOS,[193] as well as later implementations such as FreeDOS,[194] ArcaOS,[195] ReactOS,[196] Haiku,[197][198] ZETA,[199] KolibriOS,[200] Syllable Desktop,[201] AmigaOS 4,[202] and AROS.[203][204] Particularly prolific is New Breed Software, which offers games for all or most of those systems,[205] as well as for vintage computers such as the Atari 8-bit, Atari ST, and Amiga, homebrew for several game consoles such as the Sega Dreamcast, Sony PlayStation 2 and Nintendo Wii, handhelds such as the Sony PSP, Nintendo DS and GP2X, as well as mobile platforms such as the Agenda VR3, OpenZaurus, Maemo, and SymbianOS.[206]

Bos Wars

Strategy and simulation games have been a prevalent force in free software gaming,[207] partly due to the lack of proprietary options for free software operating systems as compared to other genres like first-person shooters and role-playing games.[208][209] Xconq and XBattle, and later Freeciv and Lincity, began the trend, and were followed by other clone titles like FreeCol, UnCiv,[210] Crimson Fields,[211] C-evo, LordsAWar!, Freelords, Civil,[212] LGeneral,[213] Open General,[214] OpenPanzer,[215] OpenCity, OpenRTS,[216] TripleA,[217] Mars, Land of No Mercy,[218] Ophiuchus,[219] Mindustry,[220] Tanks of Freedom,[221] OpenRA, OpenRCT2, OpenTTD, Simutrans, StormWar,[222] Advanced Strategic Command,[223] Tenes Empanadas Graciela, Endgame: Singularity, Thousand Parsec, Unknown Horizons and Widelands.

The Stratagus project began as an attempt to recreate the proprietary Warcraft II engine, under the name FreeCraft. Blizzard Entertainment sent a cease and desist letter in 2003 over the use of the name "craft" in comparison to Warcraft and StarCraft.[224] Though the earlier free software strategy game CRAFT: The Vicious Vikings shared the name "craft" without controversy.[225] With the new, legally inoffensive name Stratagus and the old FreeCraft assets renamed Aleona's Tales, the team began work on a new strategy game called Bos Wars.

Speed Dreams

Development on this game still continues, as well as the modern Warcraft II port Wargus. Other games branched out of the engine project as well such as the Battle for Mandicor and Astroseries projects, the StarCraft port attempt Stargus, and most recently Wyrmsun.[226] After the Stratagus example, other real-time strategy games were developed, such as Globulation 2, which experiments with game management mechanics, the similarly experimental Liquid War, mutliplayer military game TUD,[227] the claymation based Dark Oberon,[228] and the 3D projects 0 A.D. (a former freeware project), Boson,[229] Battles of Antargis,[230] Spring and Glest.[154]

Racing games, another uncommon Linux commercial genre, have also seen development.[231] One of the earliest was RARS, which evolved following the principle of forking into TORCS and then Speed Dreams. MicroRacers[232] and Toy Cars[233] are inspired by Micro Machines, while Ultimate Stunts[234] and Stunt Rally,[235] are rooted in Stunts. Other racing games include versions of Racer, VDrift, Rigs of Rods, Slune,[236] GLtron and Armagetron Advanced, YORG,[237] the Mario Kart–inspired SuperTuxKart, Elasto Mania clone X-Moto, SkyRoads imitator Orbit-Hopper,[238] sledding game Extreme Tux Racer, the text based ZRacer,[239] and the top-down Trophy,[240] Dust Racing 2D and Pixel Wheels.[241]

One Hour One Life

WorldForge, Ryzom, Crossfire, Solipsis, Illarion,[242] and The Mana World[243][244] are further examples of increasing diversification, offering free massively multiplayer online role-playing game worlds. Single-player role-playing games are also available, such as A Dark Room, Heroes of Allacrost,[245] Valyria Tear,[246] Empty Clip,[247] Summoning Wars,[248] GNU FreeDink,[249] FLARE,[250] Heroine Dusk,[251] FreedroidRPG,[252] the Cube World inspired Veloren,[253] and the Pokémon derived Tuxemon,[254] OPMon,[255] and Pigeon Ascent.[256]

The rise of the independent game development in the 2000s and 2010s was partly driven by the growing ecosystem of open-source libraries and engines; indie developers utilized the open-source ecosystem due to good cross-platform capabilities and availability for limited financial burden.[257] Game jams such as Ludum Dare and Game Off are often run on open source principles, frequently using free frameworks such as pygame, Arcade,[258] Wasabi2D,[259] and Ren'Py for Python, Ruby2D[260] and Gosu[261] for Ruby, GGEZ[262] for Rust, LibGDX for Java, MiniGDX[263] for Kotlin, LÖVE and Solar2D for Lua, Ebitengine[264] for Go, Phaser, Panda,[265] and SuperPower for HTML5,[266] as well as nCine,[267] Solarus,[268] Starling, MonoGame, Twine, and Cocos2d.[269][270] Educational languages such as Snap! and Scratch are also free software,[271][272] as is The Wick Editor animation and game creation tool.[273] Individual developers such as Jason Rohrer, creator of Passage and One Hour One Life, and Kenta Cho have embraced open source.[274]

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