Available computer opponents are an assortment of mostly 18th and 19th century generals: Campbell, Mackenzie, Marmont, Barbacena, D'Erlon, Maransin, Solignac, Sherbrooke, Aubert, Spencer, Taupin, Freire, Vauban, Baird, Bonaparte and Wellington. Up to eight players can play, in any combination of human and computer opponents (as long as at least one player is human). In addition to the classic board game style of play, Risk II introduced new modes including a single-player tournament and a brand new concept called SameTime, in which turns are taken simultaneously by all players. It's a sequel to the 1996 version of Risk. P.S.Risk II is a video game version of the board game Risk, developed by Deep Red Games and published by Hasbro Interactive under the MicroProse label. Hell, the WinDoZe port of the exact same game even *LACKS* *NUMEROUS* features that the DOS version has! :duh: Risk for DOS is the ONLY version of computerized Risk that includes ALL of the game variants of the REAL board game that were popular at the time (Risk board game official rules circa 1989, US and UK editions).Īnyhow, two thumbs up. Hasbro REALLY NEEDS to REVOKE their official license from them!), several Risk styled clones for Android, as well as the Windows 3.x port of Risk for DOS (also published by Virgin, although developed by a different group of coders and developers than the DOS version). I have Risk for DOS, Risk for Windows 95, Risk II for Windows 98, the modern Risk for Android by SMG (these SO-CALLED "developers" are BRAINLESS BONEHEADS. Sure, it doesn't have all of the eye-candy of the newer incarnations of the game, but it has a *LOT* more features. But, this DOS version is the BEST BY FAR. I've bought, owned, and played MANY different versions of Risk for PC and Android. Similar to what I posted about Monopoly Deluxe for DOS:
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