SAN FRANCISCO, Dec. 10, 2019 /PRNewswire/ -- Endless, the producer of Endless OS and The Endless Mission, has launched a suite of video games designed to teach coding skills. Terminal Two tackles what Endless sees as the biggest barrier to learning to code, making coding education entertaining enough to get lost in for hours. The Terminal Two games are available on The Terminal Two web site as web based games, on the Terminal Two launcher and the Apple iPad App Store.
Mac Mini: The Mac Mini finally got updated in 2018 alongside the MacBook Air, breathing life back into the cult favorite Mac. Whether you’re looking to build a home theater PC, a Mac-based server farm, or you just need an entry-level Mac without a monitor, the Mini is a great choice. The Endless Mission is a creation sandbox game with a powerful toolset enabling multi-genre game creation that can be shared with the community. The Early Access community will be critical in helping inform what tools we should introduce and what genres we should explore next.”. Endless OS is a free OS created mainly for user’s first time using a computer. Now what makes Endless OS different and unique from other Linux distributions is that it comes preloaded with more than 100 apps. Now you might be thinking about what should I do with so many apps, read till last and you will know their purpose. Computing is one of the greatest revolutions in human history. Yet, it remains out of reach for half the planet. We created Endless OS – a free and robust computing solution – so people everywhere have access to relevant information and technology. Our goal at the Endless OS Foundation is to build a global platform for digital literacy.
“When we were building Endless OS, we discovered that so many of our engineers had learned to code by hacking their games,” said Matt Dalio, founder and president of Endless. “They had more fun hacking their games than playing the games. We had our epiphany. If we could build games that harnessed that same joy and delight, we could make kids want to learn to code.”
The Terminal Two suite of games seeks to recreate that joy, traversing some of the most popular game genres, with each game focused on building a specific skill along a guided journey. It took it cues from the gaming professionals rather than the educational software that dominates the sector. While the vast majority of education games that are out there haven’t risen to the level of delight and joy that are in consumer games, Terminal Two seeks to buck the trend and start with fun.
“Research tells us time and again that relevance, meaning and context are most important for learning. Play is by definition those three things. When a kid is completely absorbed, focus is no longer a question. Learning is not just more powerful, it becomes incidental. The learning has to be indistinguishable from the fun,” says Dennis Bartels, Managing Director of Endless.
The Terminal Two collection of games includes The Canyon, The Maze, White House, Dragon’s Apprentice, Aqueducts, Ovum City, The Passage, Frog Squash and Viking Village, with more coming. All are focused on systematically breaking down barriers, building confidence, and sparking curiosity to unlock the power of code for players ages eight to eighteen.
Beginning today, the Terminal Two games are available for free on the Terminal Two website. The launcher is available at www.terminaltwo.com, on Endless OS, Windows and Mac. Four of the Terminal Two games are also available as individual downloads on the iPad App Store. Aqueducts, White House, The Passage, Ovum City, and Frog Squash are also available as web based games on Terminal Two in time for this year’s Hour of Code. For players embarking on their adventure through the Terminal Two launcher, they’re presented a 3D map of an array of available games. Players work their way through the different games, mastering a different part of the overall narrative and coding skills throughout the games.
The games launched today include:
Dragon’s Apprentice|
An evil force has spread its way across the land of Ovum and its threatening to destroy this peaceful city. Explore hidden temples, learn magic runes that let you program and control the elements around you, and battle the shadow fiends. Find all the keys in the Dragon Temples to awaken the dragon. Be the hero that Ovum needs!
An evil force has spread its way across the land of Ovum and its threatening to destroy this peaceful city. Explore hidden temples, learn magic runes that let you program and control the elements around you, and battle the shadow fiends. Find all the keys in the Dragon Temples to awaken the dragon. Be the hero that Ovum needs!
Available on PC and Mac
Aqueducts
All the water has disappeared from your village and it’s up to you to save the day! Go on an adventure to connect the water pipes and bring water back to your village. Solve puzzles and hack your way through 15 levels of fun and challenging islands. When you’re done, build and program your own levels to challenge other players!
All the water has disappeared from your village and it’s up to you to save the day! Go on an adventure to connect the water pipes and bring water back to your village. Solve puzzles and hack your way through 15 levels of fun and challenging islands. When you’re done, build and program your own levels to challenge other players!
Available on PC, Mac, Apple iPad and Terminal Two as a web game
The Passage
Premise: You’ve landed on a mysterious planet with one mission: find the secret map to locate the hidden bunker. Can you find it? Hack the world to cross perilous lands and the obstacles within. Play to find out if you can outsmart the passage.
Premise: You’ve landed on a mysterious planet with one mission: find the secret map to locate the hidden bunker. Can you find it? Hack the world to cross perilous lands and the obstacles within. Play to find out if you can outsmart the passage.
Available on PC, Mac, Apple iPad and Terminal Two as a web game
Frog Squash
Do you have what it takes to cross these treacherous roads? You must dodge arrows, saws, and fire balls and not get squashed! Choose from eight different animals to cross these perilous roads. The key is survival to amass lots of loot and once you master the roads, hack your animal’s AI and go farther than ever before!
Do you have what it takes to cross these treacherous roads? You must dodge arrows, saws, and fire balls and not get squashed! Choose from eight different animals to cross these perilous roads. The key is survival to amass lots of loot and once you master the roads, hack your animal’s AI and go farther than ever before!
Available on PC, Mac, Apple iPad and Terminal Two as a web game
White House
Do not judge a book by its cover or lack of color! This time, you get to decide what color this world should be. Using the magic of CSS, hack your world into a unique burst of color and light revealing hidden objects and clues. Learn basic CSS techniques used to color and set attributes to the 3D objects in this unique town. Want to paint the rest of the town? Well, get through the house first, and you might just get to leave through the front door.
Do not judge a book by its cover or lack of color! This time, you get to decide what color this world should be. Using the magic of CSS, hack your world into a unique burst of color and light revealing hidden objects and clues. Learn basic CSS techniques used to color and set attributes to the 3D objects in this unique town. Want to paint the rest of the town? Well, get through the house first, and you might just get to leave through the front door.
Available on PC, Mac and Terminal Two as a web game
The Canyon
You have landed on an alien planet and must refuel your ship to continue on your journey. Program your trusty sidekick F3lix to help you on this adventure to collect resources and battle alien monsters. Work together to explore this newly discovered world, get through the obstacles and challenges, and find a way out.
You have landed on an alien planet and must refuel your ship to continue on your journey. Program your trusty sidekick F3lix to help you on this adventure to collect resources and battle alien monsters. Work together to explore this newly discovered world, get through the obstacles and challenges, and find a way out.
Available on PC and Mac
Ovum City
Can you control the chaos? Hack your way into the cyberpunk world of Ovum City. Debug broken code, solve puzzles, and upgrade your hardware as you explore self guided open world. Don’t get caught by the drones! It’s up to you how Ovum City evolves.
Can you control the chaos? Hack your way into the cyberpunk world of Ovum City. Debug broken code, solve puzzles, and upgrade your hardware as you explore self guided open world. Don’t get caught by the drones! It’s up to you how Ovum City evolves.
Available on PC, Mac, Apple iPad and Terminal Two as a web game
The Maze
You have landed on an alien planet in a pocket universe and must find a way to escape so you can continue on your journey. Explore the ruins of an advanced robotic civilization, navigate your way through the mazes and puzzles and fight off enemy robots. Meet other stranded crew members and learn their stories. With the help of your trusty sidekick F3lix, learn and use new programming concepts to hack your way to victory.
You have landed on an alien planet in a pocket universe and must find a way to escape so you can continue on your journey. Explore the ruins of an advanced robotic civilization, navigate your way through the mazes and puzzles and fight off enemy robots. Meet other stranded crew members and learn their stories. With the help of your trusty sidekick F3lix, learn and use new programming concepts to hack your way to victory.
Available on PC and Mac
“We’re just beginning to create a new universe and an exciting adventure for gamers,” said Nan Chu, games director at Endless. “The games available on the Terminal Two launcher seem like they’re separate experiences, but not all is as it first appears. We’re excited to continue supporting the Terminal Two game launcher with newer games that will help paint a bigger and brighter picture as players unravel mysteries while learning important coding and programming skills.”
This group of games from Endless are available now directly from the Terminal Two website. Terminal Two joins the suite of Endless products, Hack and The Endless Mission. For more information on Endless’ Terminal Two and to download the launcher, visit https://terminaltwo.com/.
About Endless
Founded in 2011, Endless is a collection of independent companies and initiatives focused on building technology that cultivates digital agency among youth.
Founded in 2011, Endless is a collection of independent companies and initiatives focused on building technology that cultivates digital agency among youth.
Endless is growing beyond its original product of Endless OS which has been focused on delivering digital agency in the most remote regions of the world. Endless is now bringing coding to the United States through three initiatives: Hack uses Endless OS, a full operating system where real engineering takes place, to teach kids to code through the OS. Endless is developing Terminal Two, a collection of coding-based games focused on inspiring the pursuit of learning in the next generation of gamers. Finally, The Endless Mission is a sandbox-style creation game built in partnership with E-Line Media. In this epic game players journey into a world in which they’ll hack and reshape everything around them, and share their creations with friends. Collectively, these initiatives are built to be the most delightful way for kids to learn to code. For more information on Endless visit http://endlessnetwork.com
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SOURCE Endless
Endless Space | |
---|---|
Developer(s) | Amplitude Studios |
Publisher(s) | Iceberg Interactive |
Engine | Unity |
Platform(s) | Microsoft Windows, Mac OS X |
Release | Microsoft Windows[1] July 4, 2012 Mac OS X[2] August 31, 2012 |
Genre(s) | Turn-based strategy, 4X |
Mode(s) | Single-player, multiplayer |
Endless Space is a 4Xturn-based strategy video game, developed and published by Amplitude Studios, released on July 4, 2012, for Microsoft Windows and August 31, 2012 for Mac OS X. In the game, the player takes charge of fictional space age civilizations, expanding their influence by colonization and conquest. Endless Space sold over 1 million units, and earned the Unity Golden Cube award in 2013. The game's sequel, Endless Space 2, released in 2017.
Overview[edit]
In Endless Space the player chooses one of ten unique civilizations, or can choose to create their own, to expand their interstellar empire and conquer the galaxy. To win, the player must be the first to meet the requirements for certain victory conditions, such as Economic, Diplomatic, Expansionary, and Supremacy victories.[3]
The game plays out on a randomly generated galaxy map with room for up to eight players/AI per game. Players colonize different star systems, which in turn contain up to six planets. Star systems are connected via a series of cosmic strings which allow ships to travel rapidly between neighbouring systems. In addition, hero units can be recruited to act as system administrators or fleet admirals, which provide bonuses depending on their traits that can further be leveled up. Battles take place in a quasi-real-time environment, similar to rock-paper-scissors.[4]
The game features full modding and multiplayer compatibility as well.[5]
Setting[edit]
The game is set in approximately 3000AD, tens of thousands of years after the extinction of an advanced civilization known as the Endless. The major empires of the galaxy seek to control and exploit the technology of the Endless for their own agendas.
- The United Empire - A totalitarian human government operating under a combination of corporate rule and feudal monarchy, bent on galactic supremacy.
- The Pilgrims - A faction of human exiles and rebels from the United Empire, united in their desire for freedom and quasi-religious veneration of the Endless.
- The Horatio - A species of clones derived from the megalomaniacal human trillionaire Horatio, seeing themselves as a master race and desiring to 'beautify' the universe by populating it with more of their kind.
- The Sophons - A diminutive and highly advanced species of scientists and engineers, seeking to unlock the secrets of the universe.
- The Cravers - A species of ravenous cyborgs originally created as a bioweapon by the Endless. Their only goal is to expand, consume and destroy.
- The Amoeba - A peaceful species of highly evolved amoeboid lifeforms, valuing all life and seeking trade and diplomacy.
- The Hissho - An empire of avian tribal warriors seeking conquest and glory.
- The Sowers - A network of terraforming robots created by the Endless to make the galaxy suitable for habitation who have never stopped performing their original task.
- The Sheredyn - The royal bodyguards and special forces of the United Empire, who later split off and became their own faction. (Added in Emperor Edition).
- The Automatons - A robotic faction created when Dust induced sentience in the abandoned technology of an extinct civilization. (Added in Rise of the Automatons).
- The Harmony - Crystalline lifeforms that have existed since the beginning of the universe, broken from a single entity into numerous individuals by exposure to Dust. Seeing Dust as a terrifying plague, they seek to eradicate it from the universe no matter the cost. (Added in Disharmony).
- The Vaulters - A human culture that have recently escaped the dying planet Auriga, from Endless Legend, and now seek a new home among the stars. (Added in Vaulters).
Gameplay[edit]
Endless Space is a turn-based strategy game set in 3000 AD, where each player (up to a maximum of eight per game) represents the leader of one of nine unique interstellar empires.[6] A player may also choose to create their own unique civilization by selecting from a number of different traits that correspond to military, science, diplomacy, hero units and so on. Each player is to guide their empire over hundreds, if not thousands, of years to diplomatic, scientific, or military conquest, attempting to meet requirements for several different victory conditions.[3] The game takes place in a randomly generated galaxy, which can change in size and shape, depending on how the host player chooses to generate it. Every player begins with one colonised capital system which is connected to further systems via cosmic links, which act as travel routes for starships. Players can also research new technologies from four different research trees, representing military, science, expansion/exploration and diplomacy. Research unlocks new ship types, planetary improvements, stat modifiers (either for heroes or planets), new travel methods which do not rely on cosmic links and more. As players expand their empire, they will gain access to strategic and luxury resources, which can be used to upgrade ships, build improvements and trade with other players. Strategic resources are primarily used to upgrade components of your empire, while luxury resources are primarily used for trade and maintaining your empire's approval rating.
The game uses four basic resources to manage its economy: Food, Industry, Dust and Science, or FIDS. Dust is a substance that was left over from the Endless civilization, used as currency. Players must balance FIDS in order to rapidly expand their empire, build ships and research advanced technologies. In addition, a lower or imbalanced FIDS across your empire results in a low approval rating.[3] A high approval rating provides bonuses to production efficiency, while a low approval rating can drastically lower efficiency making it incredibly difficult to advance. A tax rate slider can also be adjusted to change approval rating, but lower taxes result in a lower revenue stream of Dust.
Hero units can be recruited using Dust, to act as either fleet commanders or system administrators. Each hero unit is unique and provides two unique bonuses, which can be further leveled up. Three hero units are randomly selected from a pool unique to each empire and new hero units are available for purchase every fifty turns.
Space combat[edit]
Interstellar fleet battles take place in a quasi-real-time environment, similar to a complex game of rock-paper-scissors. Uap 158 - the challenge mac os. Each battle scene takes place in three engagement stages: long-range, medium-range, and melee-range engagements, with different types of weapons and ship systems performing better or worse as the fleets increase in physical proximity over time. Fleets are issued up to three different 'cards', one for each stage of combat, which represent fleet-wide general orders, from categories such as attack, defend, tactics, sabotage, and engineering. Each card has a certain function, such as increasing the fleet's weapons damage by a certain amount (an 'attack' card), however some cards can counter opposing cards, as in the case of an 'attack' card played against an enemy's 'tactics' card during long-range engagement, where the attack card gives a straight damage improvement while the tactics card provides a damage improvement but weakens the fleet's defences correspondingly - the attack card's increased damage counters the tactics card's weakened defences, and the attacking fleet thus gains a sizable additional bonus to damage during long-range engagement. No traditional combat micromanagement takes place during these battles, though the player instead is engaged in terms of understanding fleet composition and attempting to predict and counter likely 'card' plays by the enemy fleet based on how the engagement has unfolded so far. More advanced or specialised cards may also be unlocked through research or through advanced training available to experienced commanders. Fleet size and composition play a very important role, such as determining combat effectiveness (when, per se, the attack card is played) and ability to maneuver. Fleets with hero units assigned to them may also experience bonuses. During battles, the camera is by default placed in a cinematic mode, but a free camera mode is also available.[3]
Victory conditions[edit]
A player wins the game when they reach the requirements[7] for a number of victory conditions, listed below:
- Expansion: conquer 75% or more of the colonized universe
- Scientific: research Pan-Galactic Society, the final, extremely expensive tech node at the end of the Scientific tech tree.
- Economic: reach a certain level of cumulative Dust revenue.
- Diplomatic: acquire enough Diplomatic Points (by diplomatically interacting with other factions).
- Supremacy: capture every other player's homeworld.
- Wonder: reconstruct at least five 'Endless Worder' structures.
- Score: achieve the highest total score by the end of the turn limit.
Endless Os Download Windows
Release[edit]
Endless Space was made available for pre-purchase on May 2, 2012, on Steam. Customers who pre-ordered the game would receive access to the current alpha build and later beta builds prior to launch.[8] In addition, customers who pre-ordered would be allowed to provide input on the game's development, through a feature called Games2Gether.[9] The game was released on July 4, 2012[10] on two digital distribution platforms: Steam[11] and GamersGate.[12] It came in two special editions: an 'Admiral' edition containing the original soundtrack and a forum badge and an 'Emperor' Special Edition containing the Admiral edition content, as well as a ship skin pack and an Endless hero.[13]
Updates[edit]
- The Rise of the Automatons: Released October 26, 2012, this free add-on added a new community-voted faction 'The Automatons,' a machine-like race. The add-on also brought in a new trade route and empire management system as well as improvements to the hero system, diplomacy and AI.[14]
- Echoes of the Endless: Released December 1, 2012, this second free add-on introduces new exploration rewards, interactive random events, natural and 'endless' wonders, and more life on the galaxy map (e.g. black holes, comets, pulsars). The add-on also included new heroes and multiplayer improvements.[15]
- Lights of Polaris: Released December 19, 2012, the third free add-on for Endless Space added a new Christmas-themed Natural Wonder called 'The Polaris Factory', a new hero based on Ebeneezer Scrooge, as well as several combat enhancements, fixes, and new Steam Achievements.[16]
- Virtual Awakening: Released March 11, 2013, the fourth add-on adds new heroes, technology, star system improvements, exploration events, random events, new anomalies, victory warnings and auto scrap features, among other gameplay fixes.[17]
- Disharmony: Released on June 26, 2013, the first piece of paid downloadable content, Disharmony introduces a brand new faction - the Harmony. The DLC also includes new ship types, including bombers and fighters, an overhauled ship interface design, battle formations, a new targeting system, redesigned weapon systems and new invasion mechanics.[18]
- The Search for Auriga: Released on November 14, 2013, this is the first free add-on for Disharmony. It adds two new Heroes, one new Wonder, a unique Planet, and other gameplay enhancements and fixes. This is the last additional content produced by Amplitude for Endless Space.[19]
Reception[edit]
Aggregator | Score |
---|---|
Metacritic | 77/100[20] |
Endless Os Iso Download
Publication | Score |
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GameSpy | 3.5/5[22] |
IGN | 8/10[21] |
Publication | Award |
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Unity Awards | Golden Cube award (2013)[23] Community Choice award (2013)[23] |
Endless Space was met positively by critics, with an aggregate score of 77/100 on Metacritic.[20]IGN praised the game for its accessibility and replay value, while criticizing the sound assets and unclear tool-tips for newer players.[21]GameSpy gave Endless Space a rating of 3.5/5 stars, praising the game's user interface, but criticizing the game for lacking personality.[22]
The game was also nominated for 5 awards by Unity Technologies.[24]Endless Space won the Golden Cube and Community Choice awards at the Unite 2013 ceremony.[23]
Sequel[edit]
The second installment in the series, Endless Space 2 was announced on July 30, 2015 and was released on May 18, 2017.
References[edit]
- ^Sliwinski, Alexander. 'Endless Space warps onto Mac'. Joystiq. Retrieved 14 December 2012.CS1 maint: discouraged parameter (link)
- ^'4X Strategy Endless Space blasts off next week'. ShackNews. June 27, 2012. Retrieved July 5, 2012.CS1 maint: discouraged parameter (link)
- ^ abcdDean, Paul. 'Endless Space Preview'. IGN. Retrieved July 5, 2012.CS1 maint: discouraged parameter (link)
- ^Chow, Kevin. 'Endless Space Beta Impressions'. GoozerNation.com. Archived from the original on June 23, 2012. Retrieved July 5, 2012.CS1 maint: discouraged parameter (link)
- ^'Endless Space Interview'. Strategy Informer. June 25, 2012. Retrieved July 7, 2020.CS1 maint: discouraged parameter (link)
- ^Young, Rory. 'Endless Space launch trailer prompts you to exterminate all resistance'. Neoseeker. Retrieved July 5, 2012.CS1 maint: discouraged parameter (link)
- ^'Endless Space User Manual'(PDF). Amplitude Studios. Retrieved July 5, 2012.CS1 maint: discouraged parameter (link)
- ^Solo, Adam (May 2, 2012). 'Endless Space Pre-Orders Open On Steam'. Space Sector. Retrieved July 8, 2012.CS1 maint: discouraged parameter (link)
- ^Husemann, Charles. 'Endless Space Games2Gether Interview'. Gaming Nexus. Retrieved 8 July 2012.CS1 maint: discouraged parameter (link)
- ^'Endless Space gets a 4th July release date'. Strategy Informer. 26 June 2012. Retrieved 5 July 2012.CS1 maint: discouraged parameter (link)
- ^Purchese, Robert (May 9, 2012). 'PC strategy game Endless Space given release date'. EuroGamer.net. Retrieved July 5, 2012.CS1 maint: discouraged parameter (link)
- ^Mudgal, Kartik. 'Endless Space now available on Steam and other platforms, trailer inside'. GamingBolt.com. Retrieved 5 July 2012.CS1 maint: discouraged parameter (link)
- ^Gonzalez, Christina. 'Endless Space is Officially Released'. RTSGuru.com. Archived from the original on August 20, 2017. Retrieved July 5, 2012.CS1 maint: discouraged parameter (link)
- ^Sharkey, Mike (October 3, 2012). 'First Endless Space Free Add-on, Rise of the Automatons, Hits Steam Today'. GameSpy. Retrieved December 14, 2012.CS1 maint: discouraged parameter (link)
- ^Gonzalez, Christina. 'Endless Space Gets New Content, Free to Play Weekend Coming'. RTS Guru. Archived from the original on February 1, 2013. Retrieved December 14, 2012.CS1 maint: discouraged parameter (link)
- ^Senior, Tom. 'Endless Space free update adds Christmas wonder, optional pirates, new hero'. PC Gamer. PC Gamer. Archived from the original on March 8, 2016. Retrieved December 26, 2012.CS1 maint: discouraged parameter (link)
- ^Smith, Adam. 'Starface: Endless Space – Free DLC & Sale'. Rock, Paper, Shotgun. Retrieved June 28, 2013.CS1 maint: discouraged parameter (link)
- ^Gonzalez, Christina. 'Endless Space: Disharmony Expansion Launches'. RTS Guru. Archived from the original on June 29, 2013. Retrieved June 28, 2013.CS1 maint: discouraged parameter (link)
- ^Farokhmanesh, Megan. 'Endless Space: The Search for Auriga update now available'. Polygon. Retrieved February 16, 2014.CS1 maint: discouraged parameter (link)
- ^ ab'Metacritic Endless Space'. Metacritic. Retrieved July 12, 2012.CS1 maint: discouraged parameter (link)
- ^ abDean, Paul (July 6, 2012). 'Endless Space Review'. IGN. Retrieved July 8, 2012.CS1 maint: discouraged parameter (link)
- ^ abZacny, Rob (July 6, 2012). 'Endless Space Review'. GameSpy. Retrieved July 8, 2012.CS1 maint: discouraged parameter (link)
- ^ abc'Endless Space wins best game at Unity awards'. Gameindustry.biz. 2013-08-30. Retrieved 2020-07-03.
- ^'Endless Space leads nominations at Unity Awards'. Gameindustry.biz. 2013-08-08. Retrieved 2020-07-03.
Endless Os Download
External links[edit]
Endless Os 64
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