Bos Wars

Bos Wars
Developer(s) Bos Wars Team
Platform(s) AmigaOS 4, MorphOS, AROS, Linux, Windows, Cross-platform
Release date(s) March 4, 2007 (2007-03-04)
Genre(s) Real-time strategy
Mode(s) Single-player, multiplayer

Bos Wars (formerly known as Battle of Survival) is an open source, cross-platform real-time strategy video game. The project was started by Tina Petersen, who died in 2003,[1] and the current project leader is François Beerten.

Gameplay

The game map initially starts with a fog of war covering all area which is not covered by the player's units range of view. As the units explore the map, the darkness is removed. Revealed areas which are not in view range are again darkened to hide enemy unit movement on those areas. All players have the same buildings and units. There is no research in the game so you can instantly build new buildings, aircraft, land vehicles and troops after you have collected enough resources to build them.

The resources in the game are magma and energy. Magma is gathered by engineers or harvesters from rocks or manufactured by magma pumps from hot spots. Energy is gathered by engineers or harvesters from trees or mogrels or manufactured by power plants.

There are three types of structures: basic, unit, and defense. The basic structures are power plants, magma pumps, radar, cameras, and vaults. The unit structures are training camps, vehicle factories, hospitals and aircraft factories. Lastly, the defensive buildings are gun turrets, cannons, and missile silos.

Technical features

The game is written in C++ and Lua with the SDL library. The game uses a game engine based on the Stratagus engine. Originally the game data structure was separated from the graphical engine, but it was merged into the game in 2007, and the Stratagus project was merged into the Bos Wars project shortly after the engine change.

Although an official central server has not been created yet, Bos Wars supports multi-player online play provided that users are able to obtain the IP addresses of potential opponents. Certain web-sites allow users to swap IP addresses easily.

Awards

Bos Wars was on LinuxLinks "42 More of the Best Free Linux Games"[2] list as well as their later top one hundred list.[3]

See also

References

External links

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 11/6/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.