V for Victory: Gold-Juno-Sword

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V for Victory: Gold-Juno-Sword
V for Victory Gold Juno Sword cover.jpg
Developer(s)Atomic Games
Publisher(s)Three-Sixty Pacific
Platform(s)DOS, Macintosh
Release1993
Genre(s)Computer wargame

V for Victory: Gold-Juno-Sword is 1993 computer wargame developed by Atomic Games and published by Three-Sixty Pacific. It is part of the V for Victory series.

Gameplay[]

Revisits the D-Day beaches, this time covering the operations in the British and Canadian sectors and their battle to take Caen.

Development[]

Reception[]

While praising V for Victory: Gold-Juno-Sword's documentation and SVGA graphics, Computer Gaming World stated that the fourth game "succeeds only a technological level, bereft of soul" and compared the series to "a line of books without an editor". The magazine concluded that "Three-Sixty's reputation in the hobby has suffered a major blow".[2]

In 1994, the editors of PC Gamer US wrote, "The V for Victory series is quite simply the most playable war games available, with an easy-to-master interface and admirable depth of game play." They continued, "We single out Utah Beach because it launched the series — but by all means, check out Velikiye Luki, Gold*Juno*Sword, and Market Garden, too."[3]

Gold-Juno-Sword was a runner-up for Computer Gaming World's Wargame of the Year award in June 1994, losing to Clash of Steel. The editors wrote, "Although basically a sequel, the improvements to the system bring it to the realms of wargame finalist".[4]

Reviews[]

References[]

  1. ^ Ferrell, Ed (January 1994). "V for Victory: Gold, Juno, Sword". Electronic Entertainment (1): 114.
  2. ^ Coleman, Terry (December 1993). "It Was the Best of Times, It Was the Worst of Times". Computer Gaming World. pp. 244, 246. Retrieved 31 March 2016.
  3. ^ Staff (August 1994). "PC Gamer Top 40: The Best Games of All Time". PC Gamer US (3): 32–42.
  4. ^ "Announcing The New Premier Awards". Computer Gaming World. June 1994. pp. 51–58.
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