Abbiamo compilato una lista di 16 alternative gratuite e a pagamento a Enemy Territory: Legacy. I principali concorrenti includono Team Fortress 2, Unreal Tournament. Inoltre, gli utenti fanno anche confronti tra Enemy Territory: Legacy e Counter-Strike, Battlefield, Call of Duty. Puoi anche dare un'occhiata ad altre opzioni simili qui: Giochi.
Abbiamo compilato una lista di 16 alternative gratuite e a pagamento a Enemy Territory: Legacy. I principali concorrenti includono Team Fortress 2, Unreal Tournament. Inoltre, gli utenti fanno anche confronti tra Enemy Territory: Legacy e Counter-Strike, Battlefield, Call of Duty. Puoi anche dare un'occhiata ad altre opzioni simili qui: Giochi.
Enemy Territory: Legacy is an open source project based on the code of Wolfenstein: Enemy Territory.
Enemy Territory: Legacy is an open source project based on the code of Wolfenstein: Enemy Territory.
Enemy Territory: Legacy Piattaforme
Windows
Linux
Mac
Enemy Territory: Legacy Panoramica
Wolfenstein: Enemy Territory is a free multiplayer first-person shooter. Set during World War II and heavily focused on team work, it was initially released in 2003 by Splash Damage and id Software. More than a decade after its release, after spending countless hours of escorting tanks and trucks, stealing gold and radar parts and transmitting confidential documents, it was time to dust off the game which consistently refused to go down.
Enemy Territory: Legacy is an open source project based on the code of Wolfenstein: Enemy Territory which was released in 2010 under the terms of GPLv3 license. The main goal of this project is to fix bugs, remove old dependencies and make it playable on all major operating systems while still remaining compatible with the ET 2.60b version and as many of its mods as possible. We do appreciate any contribution to the project such as patches, suggestions or comments.
Many thanks to Splash Damage for their release of the source code, raedwulf-et (especially Ralph Eastwood) & Unvanquished for our code base and ioQuake3 for their patches (especially /dev/humancontroller). Kudos!