About the Book
This book consists of articles from Wikia. Pages: 37. Chapters: Wii Virtual Console games, Battle.net, Nintendo Wi-Fi Connection, Steam, WiiConnect24, Xbox Live, Xbox Live Arcade, Adventures of Lolo, Adventures of Lolo 2, Altered Beast, Battle City, Bonk's Adventure, Breath of Fire II, Bubble Bobble, Castlevania, Clu Clu Land, Columns, Crack Down, Devil's Crush, Donkey Kong Jr. Math, Dr. Robotnik's Mean Bean Machine, Dragon Spirit, Dynamite Headdy, Front Line, Golden Axe, Gradius, Gradius III, Gunstar Heroes, Ice Climber, Image Fight, Life Force, Mario Bros., Ninja Spirit, Nintendo, Sonic the Hedgehog, Space Harrier, Splatterhouse, Star Fox 64, Super Castlevania IV, Super Mario Bros., Super Mario Bros. 2, The Legend of Zelda, ToeJam & Earl, ToeJam & Earl in Panic on Funkotron, Urban Champion, Virtual Console. Excerpt: The Battle.net free online gaming service was created in 1996 by Blizzard Entertainment, to facilitate the growth of its own games, namely Warcraft II (Battle.net Edition), Diablo, and StarCraft. Diablo II and Warcraft III would later come to use the service. Being a wholly closed, commercial venture, and with the complication that use of the service (after initial investment in a game that uses it) is free, Battle.net teeters between balance and order often. Blizzard frequently takes, some might say draconian, action in banning game CD-keys and B.net account names associated with game exploits, cheating, and game hack modifications. For this and other reasons, the bnetd project, basically an emulation of B.net, was created to allow players to use the online-play capabilities of Battle.net without having to play by Blizzard's rules (since Blizzard's servers would be cut out of the picture). Under the Digital Millennium Copyright Act Blizzard ordered the cease- and desist-ment of the bnetd project in early 2002. A download is any file that is offered for downloading or that has been downloaded.Originally downloads have been primarily used with pers...