Supreme Ruler Ultimate Wiki

Supreme Ruler Ultimate is a grand strategy video game developed by BattleGoat Studios. It is the fifth installment in the Supreme Ruler series and was released on October 17, 2014; the game is the sequel to Supreme Ruler 1936. It is a compilation release, streamlining Supreme Ruler 2020, Supreme Ruler Cold War, Supreme Ruler 1936 into one game, using the same UI as 1936, as well as adding additional features and gameplay. Supreme Ruler Ultimate operates as a real-time strategy game, but the player is able to pause the game and choose the game speed. In the game the player tries to control a country. War is a dominant theme in the game with its military element played in battalion-sized units created by the player during the game. There is a detailed economic aspect that records a large variety of statistics including under and over employment and natural resources. AI nations work on the same economy system as the player so for example if no one produces enough oil everybody will suffer. Players can choose from nearly any existing country as their starting region, some sandboxes and scenarios feature sub-national divisions to choose from.
What is of supreme importance in war is to attack the enemy's strategy. The ultimate in disposing one's troops is to be without ascertainable shape. If fighting is sure to result in victory, then you must fight, even though the ruler forbid it;. This is the first NON-ROBLOX video in 7 LONG months. I'm not dead btw, I just am busy. HERE IS THE CHEAT.
Starting eras of the game sandboxes include: 1936 - The Road to War 1940 - Europe at War 1941 - The World at War 1949 - Cold War 2017 / 2018 - Trump Rising 2020 - Divided States 2020 - Make America Great 2020 - Shattered World 2020 - World Regions are controlled through a number of 'cabinet departments' consisting of: State Department Finance Resources Research Defense Production Defense Deployment and Orders Supreme Ruler Ultimate was developed and published by BattleGoat Studios on Steam. The game uses the proprietary BattleGoat Game Engine, used and updated since the release of the original Supreme Ruler 2010 game in 2005; the Supreme Ruler games series is a modern update of the original Supreme Ruler game first released for the TRS-80microcomputer in 1982. Game developer George Geczy created the original game and has been the technical lead and primary programmer in each of the modern game releases. Supreme Ruler Ultimate was released to the public on Steam for Windows and Mac OSX on October 17, 2014.
In a review of the game at Armchair General, Robert Mackey wrote that 'Overall, the game does fine for what it is designed to do—provide a playable, real-time grand-strategy game covering 150 years or so of modern history.'Neal Sayatovich at Game Industry News, wrote that 'Supreme Ruler Ultimate should be the ultimate go-to wargame on your list.' List of grand strategy video games List of BattleGoat Studios games List of PC games Supreme Ruler Ultimate at BattleGoat Studios
Charles Colcock Jones Jr. was a Georgiapolitician and author. He was the mayor of Savannah prior to Sherman's March to the Sea. Charles C. Jones Jr. was born October 28, 1831, in Savannah, the son of Charles Colcock Jones, a Presbyterian minister. He graduated with a bachelor's degree from Princeton University in 1852 followed with a law degree from Harvard University in 1855, he became mayor of Savannah in 1860. Because of the war, Jones had to move to New York City, he was elected a member of the American Antiquarian Society in 1869. In 1877 he moved back to Georgia. On July 19, 1893, he died of Bright's disease, he published one hundred writings, including the following notable books: Historical Sketch of the Chatham Artillery The Siege of Savannah in December, 1864 Antiquities of the Southern Indians of the Georgia tribes The Dead Towns of Georgia History of Georgia Negro Myths of the Georgia Coast Works by or about Charles Colcock Jones Jr. at Internet Archive Georgia Archaeology Who's Who New Georgia Encyclopedia: Charles C. Jones Jr.
The Siege of Savannah in December, 1864, the Confederate Operations in Georgia and the Third Military District of South Carolina During General Sherman's March from Atlanta to the Sea, Louis Round Wilson Library Jones, Charles C. Anniversary address delivered before the Georgia historical society, in Hodgson hall, on the 14th of February, 1881. Savannah: Georgia Historical Society. Retrieved 21 February 2018
Casey Dick is a former American college football quarterback for the University of Arkansas. He is head coach at Fayetteville High school. Dick played for Allen High School in Allen, United States; as a senior in 2004, he threw for 1,942 yards and 14 touchdowns, while adding 401 yards and 8 touchdowns rushing. Dick committed to the University of Arkansas during the 2005 recruiting season, he was a 3-star rated prospect by Rivals.com recruiting analysts, heading a small group of 2005 quality QBs in Texas, alongside Chase Daniel and Colt McCoy. Dick practiced as the 3rd team quarterback/scout team quarterback for the majority of the 2005 season, anticipating being redshirted for the season, his first playing time came during that same season in which he started off the bench over then-starter Robert Johnson for the game against South Carolina. Dick played well against South Carolina, Ole Miss, 3rd ranked LSU and finished the season as the starting quarterback for the Razorbacks. Dick sustained an injury during summer practices, prompting coaches to again start Johnson against Southern California.
He played in the 2006 season, replaced Mitch Mustain as the starter when Mustain was benched after leading Arkansas on an 8-0 streak. Dick led Arkansas to a loss against the eventual NCAA National Championshion Florida Gators in the 2006 SEC Championship Game. Dick started in Arkansas' Capital One Bowl loss against Wisconsin; the 2007-2008 football season was Dick's junior season. Pursuant to Mitch Mustain's transfer to USC, he had no 'real' competition for the quarterback position; some fans were critical of Dick after throwing key interceptions in conference losses against Kentucky and Tennessee, but he held his starting job despite a brief run from backup Nathan Emert. On November 17 in a home game against Mississippi State, he threw a career-high 4 touchdown passes and completed 14 of 17 attempts for 199 yards, earning him his first SEC Player of the Week honors. On Friday, November 23, Dick led Arkansas to a 50-48 win over top ranked LSU, in which he made key passes to Peyton Hillis on a fourth-and-10 in the second overtime to extend the game and again for a 12-yard touchdown to tie.
Casey Dick ended the season third place in Arkansas school history for touchdown passes with 35 behind Matt Jones with 53 and Clint Stoerner with 57. He finished the year fourth in the SEC with a QB rating of 129.67. Dick entered his senior season under new head coach Bobby Petrino with the inside track on the starting job and started in the team's opener against Western Illinois. A limited amount of competition was expected from redshirt freshman Nathan Dick, Casey's brother, incoming freshman Tyler Wilson, a Rivals.com four-star prospect. Michigan transfer Ryan Mallett was on campus, but his formal request to waive the mandatory redshirt year when transferring was denied by the NCAA. Dick won the starter's job due to being an experienced senior with 21 starts at Arkansas quarterback prior to the 2008. Dick began the 2008 season with two consecutive 300-yard performances, the first of his career, the first time in history that an Arkansas quarterback had thrown for 300 yards in back-to-back outings.
After the first two games, Arkansas faced stronger competition, Dick's output suffered until he hit a statistical bottom of 94 passing yards against Kentucky in a narrow loss. Dick bounced back from his poor performance with a 284-yard, 2-touchdown game against Ole Miss, which he followed up with a 385-yard showing in a victory over 19th-ranked Tulsa, which included an early touchdown to take the lead. Dick's 385 yards were the second-highest total in school history, trailing Clint Stoerner's record of 387 against LSU in 1997 by two yards. For his performance, Dick was elected SEC Offensive Player of the Week. In his final game, Dick came off the bench to replace his injured brother Nathan and threw two touchdowns, including a fourth-down throw to receiver London Crawford with 22 seconds remaining, led Arkansas 31–30 over LSU; the play was reminiscent of the 'Miracle on Markham', Matt Jones's game-winning TD throw to beat LSU in 2002, the same distance in yardage and was to the same corner of the same end zone.
A number of planes ideal for each campaign can be selected, and have been faithfully recreated in terms of handling, capabilities and weaponry. About Genre Shooter Rating Rated 'T' for Mild Language, Mild Suggestive Themes, Violence Summary Birds of Steel is a combat simulator featuring some of the most pivotal air battles of World War II, including the battle of Midway, Guadalcanal, Coral Sea, the historic attack on Pearl Harbour, the Mediterranean Maltese island and more.Birds of Steel offers 20 historical and a wealth of fictitious missions, spanning eight world-famous campaigns, and users are given access to over 100 famous planes from the entire axis and allied forces rosters. Players can support co-op missions alongside friends, or enter massive multi-player online dogfights to see who owns the skies. Birds of steel gameplay. The classic Spitfire, P-51D Mustangs, and Messerschmidt 109 are all lined up for combat, as players opt to player opt to fight for the Allies, Japanese or Axis forces.Birds of Steel also enjoys a huge online element.
Dick's touchdown, the last pass of his career, would go on to be voted by fans as a finalist for the Pontiac Gamechanging Performance, a title awarded to the most outstanding play of the year in college football. ESPN.com's Chris Low selected Dick's pass to Crawford as one of the top fifteen plays in the SEC for the 2008 season, selected the Razorbacks' win over LSU as one of the ten best games in the SEC for that season. Dick was not selected in the 2009 NFL Draft, but attended a minicamp with the New York Jets, lasting until the final cut. Dick attended Pro Day with his former Razorback teammates prior to the 2010 NFL Draft, he was offered a tryout by the Miami Dolphins as a free agent on April 26, 2010 to throw at rookie camp
Frederick Palmer Whiddon was the founder and long-time president of the University of South Alabama, the first four-year state-supported university in Mobile, Alabama. Whiddon was born in Alabama, he was a graduate of Emory University. He held the position of dean of students at Athens State College in Athens, when he took the job as director of the University of Alabama's extension service in Mobile. Whiddon spearheaded the drive to create an autonomous new university in Mobile; that university was begun in 1963 and taught its first classes in 1964. Whiddon's 35-year tenure as the president of the University of South Alabama was marked by dramatic growth; the university came to comprise nine schools. One of those, the College of Medicine, opened in 1972 as the state's second medical school and re-established Mobile as a center of physician training in Alabama, a position it held as a monopoly until the early 20th century, when Alabama's original medical school closed. Whiddon founded the University of South Alabama Foundation to support the university's mission.

The foundation amassed a huge endowment by the 1990s by depositing federal and state reimbursements to the university for medical services performed at its hospitals. After this technique became the subject of a lawsuit, the university and the USA Foundation agreed to spend the medical reimbursements only for medical-related purposes and to refrain from further diversion of medical reimbursements into the foundation. Whiddon resigned as president of the University of South Alabama in 1998 under pressure from the university's board of trustees, he was succeeded by planning, V. Gordon Moulton. Whiddon became managing director of the USA Foundation. Under Whiddon the foundation was forced into protracted legal squabbling with the university over control of the foundation's assets and the timing and purposes for which they were being disbursed. A lawsuit was settled out-of-court in 2001. Whiddon died in Mobile on May 1, 2002. 'Dr. Fred Whiddon of Newville', Henry County Tidings, Vol. IV, No. 41, by T.
Larry Smith 'South Alabama founder Fred Whiddon dies', Birmingham Business Journal, May 1, 2002 'Facts about the agreement,' Mobile Press-Register, August 12, 2001 'Settlement made on USA lawsuit,' Mobile Press-Register, August 11, 2001, by Bill Barrow 'New chapter for USA to start today. D. D. Litt', Alabama Health Care Hall of Fame Honorees
William Ritchie was a Scottish lawyer and newspaper owner. Ritchie was born at Lundin Mill, where his father had a flax dressing business. At the age of 19 he moved to Edinburgh, after some years employment in the offices of two firms of Writers to the Signet, he became a member of the Society of Solicitors in the Supreme Courts of Scotland in 1808. After contributing to various publications, including the Scots Magazine, for a number of years, in 1816 he joined with Charles Maclaren, his elder brother John Ritchie and John Ramsay McCulloch in founding The Scotsman newspaper, the first number of which appeared the following year, Ritchie having suggest the title. Ritchie was joint editor of the paper with Charles Maclaren, concentrating on the literary content, with Maclaren attending to the political. During the fourteen years of his editorship, Ritchie himself contributed over one thousand articles to the newspaper, ranging across the law, the theatre and the natural world. Although not profitable, the newspaper established itself as a reforming journal.
In his The Newspaper Press James Grant wrote the Scotsman rendered greater service to the cause of reform than all its Scottish liberal contemporaries taken together. In 1824 Ritchie published Essays on Constitutional Law and Forms of Process and in 1827 was appointed a commissioner under the Improvements Act, he campaigned for reform of policing and prison conditions for poor debtors. On 4th February 1831, Ritchie died at his home in Edinburgh. After his death Charles Maclaren wroteHe possessed in the highest moral and physical courage, while immersed in the common cares and business of life, he retained an elevation of sentiment worthy of a hero of romance, united with the purity and gentleness, found except in the other sex. Ritchie was buried in Greyfriars Kirkyard and commemorated on the Ritchie Findlay family memorial in Dean Cemetery, Edinburgh. Ritchie was survived by his wife Alison Sandeman. Attribution This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domain: 'Ritchie, William'.
Dictionary of National Biography. London: Smith, Elder & Co. 1885–1900
There Oughta Be a Law!, or TOBAL!, was a single-panel newspaper comic strip, created by Harry Shorten and Al Fagaly, syndicated for four decades from 1944 to 1985. The gags illustrated minor absurdities, hypocrisies and misfortunes of everyday life, displayed in a single-panel or two-panel format. There Oughta Be a Law! was derivative of Jimmy Hatlo's They'll Do It Every Time which had a long run over eight decades, from 1929 to 2008. TOBAL! was syndicated by the McClure Newspaper Syndicate. In 1944, while an editor at MLJ Comics, Shorten created the strip, bringing along MLJ artist Al Fagaly; the strip's original title was Bitter Laff, changing to There Oughta Be a Law on October 22, 1945. A Sunday strip began in 1948, ended in 1980; the strip incorporated reader ideas. Fagaly died in 1963, with Warren Whipple taking over the art duties until 1981. Shorten provided scripts until 1970, when Frank Borth took over the writing, lasting until 1983. Mort Gerberg took over art duties in 1981, both writing & art in 1983.
The strip ended on April 13, 1985. Many strips ended with a character yelling out the phrase 'There Oughta Be a Law!', or just 'TOBAL!' Because of its format, recurring characters were infrequently used, but TOBAL! did feature occasional characters such as Cringely, Locknutt, so on, as well as the daughter character Bratinella. Many collected editions were published by companies affiliated with Harry Shorten, including Midwood Books, Belmont Books, Belmont Tower, Roband Productions: There Oughta Be a Law! — introduction by Danny Kaye.
Supreme Ruler 2020 | |
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Developer(s) | BattleGoat Studios |
Publisher(s) | Paradox Interactive |
Platform(s) | Microsoft Windows |
Release |
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Genre(s) | Strategy |
Mode(s) | Single-player, multiplayer |
Supreme Ruler 2020 is a grand strategywargame developed by BattleGoat Studios and published by Paradox Interactive. The game was released on June 17, 2008 and is a sequel to Supreme Ruler 2010. In the game, the player controls all aspects of a region's government attempts to unite a world of fragmented states.[1] On December 23, 2008 BattleGoat Studios released an expansion pack for the game titled Global Crisis. A Gold Edition of the game containing both the core game and the expansion pack was released on September 18, 2009.
Gameplay[edit]
The game allows players to choose either Scenarios with a defined scope and objective, or a Campaign 'Sandbox' mode where there are no pre-determined victory conditions. There are over 250 playable regions simulated in the game. The player controls the economies, the militaries, research, government spending, spy operations (including the launching of satellites), and diplomacy. The player decides what military units to build, what facilities to build, how much or how little of a resource to produce, and also sets government policies in areas such as finance and social services. Diplomatic options include alliances, treaties, and trades of resources and technologies. The player can lead his or her people in technological advances and social reforms including globalization, free trade, renewable resources, biotechnology, nanotechnology, robotics, cyborg engineering and neural interface.
Supreme Ruler 2020 generally operates as a real time strategy game, though players are able to pause the game or change the game speed. The military element of the game is played through battalion-sized units represented on the game map, that can be controlled and given orders using the mouse individually or through groupings. Optionally players may leave unit initiative turned on, which will allow the AI to control military units for the player.
The player may also use Cabinet Ministers to assist with the operation of their regions, through the use of a Minister-priorities system and an in-game email system.
Multiplayer is available in LAN or Internet play for up to 16 players.
Improvements[edit]
Supreme Ruler 2020 has many improvements over BattleGoat Studios's first title Supreme Ruler 2010, including improved graphics, sound and AI.[2]
Global Crisis Expansion[edit]
In December 2008 BattleGoat and Paradox released the Global CrisisExpansion Pack for Supreme Ruler 2020. This expansion featured additional content and improvements to the core game engine.[3]Social empires.
Supreme Ruler 2020 Gold Edition[edit]
In 2009, Battlegoat Studios released a Gold Edition of Supreme Ruler 2020 including both the original game, as well as its expansion pack, Global Crisis.[4] The Gold Edition is multiplayer compatible with the expansion pack for the core game.
Mods[edit]
Most of the data files for Supreme Ruler 2020 are available in raw text format to accommodate modding. The user community has used this to create a number of mods for the game and even some third party utilities. A list of the current mods for the game is maintained on the Battlegoat Forum.[5]
Reception[edit]
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References[edit]
- ^'BattleGoat Studios - Advanced Tactical Strategy Games'. Battlegoat.com. Archived from the original on 2010-08-12. Retrieved 2010-08-06.
- ^'BattleGoat Studios - Advanced Tactical Strategy Games'. Battlegoat.com. Archived from the original on 2010-07-26. Retrieved 2010-08-06.
- ^'BattleGoat Studios - Advanced Tactical Strategy Games'. Battlegoat.com. Archived from the original on 2010-08-08. Retrieved 2010-08-06.
- ^'BattleGoat Studios - Advanced Tactical Strategy Games'. Battlegoat.com. Archived from the original on 2010-08-01. Retrieved 2010-08-06.
- ^Battlegoat Forum
- ^http://www.gamerankings.com/pc/935984-supreme-ruler-2020/index.html
- ^http://www.metacritic.com/game/pc/supreme-ruler-2020
- ^'Supreme Ruler 2020 Review for from'. 1UP.com. 2008-06-24. Archived from the original on 2012-07-17. Retrieved 2010-08-06.
- ^Todd, Brett (2008-07-01). 'Supreme Ruler 2020 Review for PC'. GameSpot. Retrieved 2010-08-06.
- ^Butts, Steve (2008-06-27). 'Supreme Ruler 2020 Review - PC Review at IGN'. Pc.ign.com. Retrieved 2010-08-06.
- ^'www.gameindustry.com'. www.gameindustry.com. Archived from the original on 2010-05-04. Retrieved 2010-08-06.
- ^'GDN: Supreme Ruler 2020 Review - PC'. Gamersdailynews.com. Archived from the original on 2010-05-04. Retrieved 2010-08-06.
- ^'Supreme Ruler 2020 review (PC)'. HonestGamers. Retrieved 2010-08-06.
- ^'Supreme Ruler 2020 – PC Game Review'. Armchair General. 2008-10-09. Retrieved 2010-08-06.