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.

Contents

Gameplay

The game 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

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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.