Target: Renegade
0 sources
Target: Renegade
Summary
Target: Renegade is a video game[1]. It has Wikipedia articles in 7 language editions, a strong signal of global cultural recognition.[2]
Key Facts
- Target: Renegade's instance of is recorded as Renegade — instance of (P31): video game[3].
- Target: Renegade's composer is recorded as Renegade — composer (P86): Tim Follin[4].
- Target: Renegade was published by Renegade — publisher (P123): Imagine Software[5].
- Target: Renegade's genre is Renegade — genre (P136): fighting game[6].
- Target: Renegade's developer is recorded as Renegade — developer (P178): Gary Biasillo[7].
- Target: Renegade's platform is recorded as Renegade — platform (P400): ZX Spectrum[8].
- Target: Renegade's platform is recorded as Renegade — platform (P400): Nintendo Entertainment System[9].
- Target: Renegade's platform is recorded as Renegade — platform (P400): Amstrad CPC[10].
- Target: Renegade's platform is recorded as Renegade — platform (P400): Commodore 64[11].
- Target: Renegade's game mode is recorded as Renegade — game mode (P404): single-player video game[12].
- Target: Renegade's game mode is recorded as Renegade — game mode (P404): co-op mode[13].
- Target: Renegade was distributed by Renegade — distribution format (P437): compact cassette[14].
- Target: Renegade's input device is recorded as Renegade — input device (P479): computer keyboard[15].
- Target: Renegade's country of origin is recorded as Renegade — country of origin (P495): United Kingdom[16].
- Target: Renegade was published on January 1, 1988[17].
Body
Authorship and Creation
Target: Renegade was published by Renegade — publisher (P123): Imagine Software[5].
Publication
Target: Renegade was published on January 1, 1988[17]. Its genre is Renegade — genre (P136): fighting game[6]. It was distributed by Renegade — distribution format (P437): compact cassette[14].
Why It Matters
Target: Renegade has Wikipedia articles in 7 language editions, a strong signal of global cultural recognition.[2]