Trigger is a free rally car racing game. Fun for all the family! You
race a sequence of 6 courses, with increasing levels of difficulty.
Trigger is highly customisable, and it's easy to add new levels and
vehicles.
Trigger is a free rally car racing game. Fun for all the family! You
race a sequence of 6 courses, with increasing levels of difficulty.
Trigger is highly customisable, and it's easy to add new levels and
vehicles.
Tuxedo The Penguin: A Quest for Herring
A 3D search/explore game staring Tux the Linux Penguin and his girlfriend Gown
as they solve problems and search a number of 3D levels for Golden Herring.
Tsito plays XiangQi (Chinese Chess) against the user or it referees two
players. It can be used on the console (or an xterm) or can communicate through
pipes to a GUI frontend. If used in a console it uses ASCII characters to
display the board on the screen.
'tsito', stands for "The Secret Inside The Orange".
XFrisk is a multi-player Risk game that supports network play. It
includes a server, "friskserver", and a client, "xfrisk". Note
that the client supports only 8bpp and 24bpp visuals.
XInvaders 3D is a 3D Vector-graphics Space Invaders clone
for X.
Way before Lara Croft, back in the 1980's and early 1990's, Rick
Dangerous was the Indiana Jones of computer games, running away from
rolling rocks, avoiding traps, from South America to a futuristic
missile base via Egypt and the Schwarzendumpf castle.
xrick is a clone of Rick Dangerous. Written entirely in C, it relies on
the Simple DirectMedia Layer library.
Zaz ain't Z*** is a puzzle game where the player has to arrange
balls in triplets.
A gravity game with addictive gameplay and bad implementation
You are the hyperspace delivery boy, use your spaceship to travel
between space bases in strange places where few people have been
before you.
A fun to play gravity game with built in level editor.
All in glorious 70s style vector graphics.
Cuneiform is an multi-language OCR system originally developed and open sourced
by Cognitive Technologies. Cuneiform was originally a Windows program, which
was ported to Linux by Jussi Pakkanen.