Tuesday, April 2, 2019

Zombie Army Trilogy [Includes Update 5 + MULTi9 Languages] For PC [7.2 GB] Highly Compressed Repack

Zombie Army Trilogy - is a third-person tactical shooter stealth game developed and published by Rebellion Developments. It is a spin-off to the Sniper Elite series, released on March 6, 2015 for Microsoft Windows.


Featuring: The epic cult horror shooter series comes to an apocalyptic conclusion with an epic new third chapter, a heart-pumping new horde mode, and remastered editions of the best-selling Nazi Zombie Army 1 & 2.  In the dying flames of World War II, Hitler has unleashed one final, unholy gamble - a legion of undead super soldiers that threatens to overwhelm the whole of Europe and fight alone or team up to save humanity from the zombie menace in this apocalyptic third-person shooter!  Download this video game for free.
1. FEATURES OF THE GAME

• Experience the awesome three nerveshredding campaigns across fifteen missions of intense third-person action.
Ultimate horror and Face your fears in the brutal new Horde Mode for 1-4 players, across 5 blood-Curdling maps.
In this video game, shred the undead with genre-best rifle ballistics, powerful firearms and deadly explosive traps.
Perfect your gameplay style and carnage with customisable loadouts pick your favourite weapons and explosives.
Defeat harrowing zombie legions, Chainsaw-wielding Elites and worse, before facing the Demonic Führer himself.

Game is updated to latest version
2. GAMEPLAY AND SCREENSHOTS
3. DOWNLOAD GAME:

♢ Click or choose only one button below to download this game.
♢ You need μTorrent program to download torrent files, download here.
♢ View detailed instructions for downloading and installing the game here.
♢ Use 7-Zip to extract RAR, ZIP and ISO files. Install PowerISO to mount ISO files.

ZOMBIE ARMY TRILOGY [INCLUDES UPDATED 5 + MULTi9] - DOWNLOAD LINKS
http://pasted.co/af29b5ae       https://pastebin.com/raw/9EYeguHE
PASSWORD FOR THE GAME
Unlock with password: pcgamesrealm

4. INSTRUCTIONS FOR THIS GAME
➤ Download the game by clicking on the button link provided above.
➤ Download the game on the host site and turn off your Antivirus or Windows Defender to avoid errors.
➤ When the download process is finished, locate or go to that file.
➤ Open and extract the file by using 7-Zip, and run the installer as admin then install the game on your PC.
➤ Once the installation is complete, run the game's exe as admin and you can now play the game.
➤ Congratulations! You can now play this game for free on your PC.
➤ Note: If you like this video game, please buy it and support the developers of this game.
Turn off or temporarily disable your Antivirus or Windows Defender to avoid false positive detections.








5. SYSTEM REQUIREMENTS:
(Your PC must at least have the equivalent or higher specs in order to run this game.)
• Operating System: Windows Vista, Windows 7, Windows 8, Windows 8.1, Windows 10
• Processor: Dual-core with SSE3 Intel Pentium D 3GHz / AMD Athlon 64 X2 4200

• Memory: at least 2GB System RAM
• Hard Disk Space: 15GB free HDD Space
• Video Card: DirectX 10.0 compatible graphics card with 512 MB (ATI Radeon HD 5870)
Supported Language: English, French, Italian, German, Spanish, Polish, Portuguese, Russian, Chinese (Simplified).
If you have any questions or encountered broken links, please do not hesitate to comment below. :D

Viking Roundup, Part 2

Continuing our look at the weirdly large number of viking games we've acquired recently.


Champions of Midgard is a viking themed worker placement game, which means we can't help but compare it to Raiders of the North Sea, especially since we picked up both games within a few months of each other. Apart from the obvious similarities, however, the two games couldn't be more different.

For the most part, Champions is a more traditional worker placement game. Each player gets a set number of workers, which they use to compete over common spaces on the board. Spaces are a mixture of resource gathering and opportunities to fight monsters such as trolls, giants, draughr, and dragons, which is the primary way to score victory points. Players use their workers to recruit warriors (represented by dice) and supplies which are needed to travel to far off monster-infested lands.

An interesting wrinkle on the "use resources to fulfill quests" theme is blame, a currency in the game that subtracts from a player's score. One of the spaces on the board is the Troll, and the player who successfully fights the Troll each round gets to give a blame token to another player, and get rid of one of his own if he has one. If no one fights the Troll, every player gets a blame token. Blame tokens are worth negative points at the end of the game in a somewhat exponential manner: one blame is -1 point, 2 is -3 points, 3 is -6, 4 is -10, and so on, so managing blame becomes a critical part of the game's strategy.

Warriors are represented by dice which are rolled to combat monsters. The different types of warriors are not necessarily better or worse than each other; sword- and spearmen provide some defense, allowing you to play it safe, while axemen tend to do more damage but provide no defense, meaning that more of your warriors will be killed in combat.

There's a fair amount of variety as far as what you can choose to focus on in the game, and this is guided to some extend by Destiny cards, which grant extra points at the end of the game for accomplishing goals such as having killed the most of a particular type of monster, or having the most gold or food left over at the end of the game.

It's a little more involved than Raiders of the North Sea, and a lot more fantastical, to the point that I think it has more in common with Lords of Waterdeep than any of the more historical viking games like the North Sea series. It is definitely sufficiently different that we play both games fairly often, sometimes even in the same weekend.

Rating: 5 (out of 5) A good mix of worker placement and dice rolling, with a fun theme and some neat twists you won't find in other games of this type.



Monday, April 1, 2019

Interview: Jeff Ronne, Tron Deadly Discs

Greetings and welcome to my hopefully new feature, interview episodes! First up is Jeff Ronne, who was the programmer for Tron Deadly Discs from M Network. I really enjoyed talking with him and I am grateful to him for his time. He's an interesting guy and also one of the few programmers at that time who programmed games for multiple systems. If you have any comments, you can email them to me at 2600gamebygame@comcast.net, or leave them on the Facebook or Twitter pages. Thanks so much for listening!


Jeff Ronne on Quora
Takeover on Intellivision Lives
Tron Deadly Discs on Intellivision Lives
Tron Deadly Discs episode