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Tenés Empanadas Graciela

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Tenés Empanadas Graciela
Original author(s)Ricardo "riq" Quesada / Community
Initial release1996; 28 years ago (1996)
Stable release
0.12.0 / November 23, 2022; 1 year ago (2022-11-23)
Repositoryhttps://github.com/wfx/teg
Written inC++
Platformcross platform
Available inSpanish, German, French, Polish and others
Typeturn-based strategy
LicenseGPL-2-0-only
Websitehttps://github.com/wfx/teg

Tenés Empanadas Graciela (TEG) is a turn-based strategy game distributed by several popular Linux distributions. The idea for this free and open-source software program came from the board game TEG, which itself is based on the strategy board game Risk but differs in many aspects of the rules.

Gameplay

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Using a server, several players can fight in maps for world domination and chat with one another. Various maps are used as battlefields in the game. The game is available in several languages including Spanish, German, French and Polish.

History

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In 1996, Argentine software developer Ricardo "riq" Quesada started developing the game and released it under the GNU GPL-2-0-only. He stopped working on it for a few years but brought the project back to life in early 2000. Some developers, graphic artists, and translators joined the project located at SourceForge servers and made TEG a success.

TEG was an early supporter of the FOSS multiplayer client-server system GGZ Gaming Zone.[1][2]

In around 2014, the project was moved from Sourceforge to GitHub.[3]

Reception

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Tenés Empanadas Graciela was reviewed as a notable Risk clone several times by free and open-source software associated media outlets, such as Linux Journal[4] and Linux Magazine.[5] In 2007, Linux.com reviewed Tenés Empanadas Graciela again as a notable Risk clone.[6] The Linux Game Tome lists the game with 4.2 of 5 stars.[7]

The game was reviewed in 2012 by republica.com.[8]

Versions and ports

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The game is widely distributed by several Linux distributions such as Ubuntu,[9] Debian,[10] Gentoo Linux,[11] and Arch Linux,[12] and ported to other operating systems such as macOS.[13]

There is also an Argentine online version of the game called WebTeg which allows users to play with just a web browser.

See also

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References

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  1. ^ TEG on dev.ggzgamingzone.org
  2. ^ GGZ Talk on LinuxTag (2005)
  3. ^ teg on github.com
  4. ^ Gagné, Marcel, (2002), "Networking for Pleasure" Linux Journal
  5. ^ Greve, Georg CF, (2002), "Brave GNU World", Linux Magazine, Issue 22. (archived)
  6. ^ Risk gamers use free software to take over the world by David A. Harding on Linux.com (2007)
  7. ^ TEG on happypenguin.org
  8. ^ La conquista del mundo con nombre en clave: ‘Tenés empanadas, Graciela’ on republica.com by R. A. (2012-05-30)
  9. ^ TEG on packages.ubuntu.com/
  10. ^ TEG on packages.debian.org/
  11. ^ teg on sources.gentoo.org
  12. ^ teg on aur.archlinux.org
  13. ^ darwinports.com
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