B

This medal is awarded to games that have received a calculated grade of B for their multi-monitor support. All of these games are without major flaws, but have at least one blemish that prevents a perfect score.

Half-Life Deathmatch Source

Winner of over 50 Game of the Year awards, Half-Life set new standards for action games when it was released in 1998. Half-Life: Source is a digitally remastered version of the critically acclaimed and best selling PC game, enhanced via Source technology to include physics simulation, enhanced effects, and more.

Nuclear Dawn

In this Source-based multiplayer FPS each team may consist of four classes of combatants on the field plus one commander playing from a bird's eye view. The commander can build structures and research upgrades that will let him perform actions on the map such as deploy weapon stashes, launch artillery strikes or cast zone healing.

Oil Rush

Oil rush is a fast-paced RTS set in a flooded world where oil is the only resource and micro-management is kept to a minimum. Units are produced automatically up to their population limit and the player commands them as groups, sending swarms from platform to platform rather than to attack other units directly. Defenses can also be built in the form of towers on slots around certain platforms, but the priceless oil rigs must be defended by units only. Experience points can be spent as tech upgrades ranging from faster construction to nuclear warhead launches.

Nation Red

Nation Red is a fast-paced top-down zombie survival game that supports up to 4 players in co-op mode.

There are 4 character classes available, and players can customise their characters with perks, power-ups, and a variety of weapons.

The game is available from Steam.

Company of Heroes: Tales of Valor

Company of Heroes: Tales of Valor is the second standalone expansion to Company of Heroes. It remains a WW2 Real Time Strategy gamethat attempts to combine riveting, accessible real-time strategy gameplay with the cinematic sensibilities of World War II movies. The game supports multiplayer games for two to eight players via LAN or internet.

The original game and previous standalone expansion pack (Opposing Fronts) missions can be accessed through the same in-game menu once installed.

Company of Heroes: Opposing Fronts

Company of Heroes: Opposing Fronts is a standalone expansion to Company of Heroes. It remains a WW2 Real Time Strategy gamethat attempts to combine riveting, accessible real-time strategy gameplay with the cinematic sensibilities of World War II movies. The game supports multiplayer games for two to eight players via LAN or internet.

The previous game and subsequent standalone expansion pack (Tales of Valor) missions can be accessed through the same in-game menu once installed.

Naval Warfare

Naval Warfare is the PC version of the XBox360 game Aqua. Although it feels a bit dated now compared to Renegade Ops, it's a nice two-stick top-down shooter alternative for XP users. And seriously: steampunk boats !!

The game features a campaign, skirmish mode and 1vs.1 unsplit-screen multiplayer.

Warhammer 40,000: Dawn of War II Chaos Rising

Your Blood Ravens have saved the sector, but can they save themselves?

In THQ Inc. and Relic Entertainment’s sequel to the acclaimed Dawn of War II real time strategy franchise, you return to sub sector Aurelia where a long lost frozen ice planet has reappeared from the Warp, bringing with it new secrets to uncover and foes to face.

Warhammer 40,000: Dawn of War II

It is the distant future and the Imperium of Man has spread across the entire galaxy. But our days of expansion are long past. Where once we fought to conquer, now we fight simply to survive. Savage and bloodthirsty aliens ravage our worlds. Our defenders die by the billions in endless wars of attrition. Devious enemies lure us into traps and snares. Advanced alien technology claims millions of lives in mere moments.

Now, from beyond the galaxy's edge comes the greatest threat yet to our survival.

Edge

The gameplay involves guiding a cube around 46 levels collecting coloured cubes by dragging the finger across a touch screen, taking care not to fall off the paths. By dragging hard enough, the player can make the cube climb over steps. By balancing the cube along the edge of a wall or space, players can hang across certain edges in order to cross large gaps.