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Developers | Epic Games Digital Extremes | Publisher | Atari (Linux/Windows), MacSoft (Mac), Midway, GOG.com | Designer | Jeff Morris Steven Polge | Engine | Unreal Engine 2.5 3120-3369 | Version | 3369.2 (Linux), 3369.2 (Mac), 3369 (Win) | Computing platform | Microsoft Windows, Mac OS X, Linux | Release date | North America : March 16, 2004
Europe : March 18, 2004
Australasian : March 19, 2004 | Genre | First-person shooter | Modes | Single-player, Multiplayer | Rating | | ESRB : M| OFLC : MA15+| PEGI : 16+ | Digital media | CD, DVD, Steam download | System requirements | Operating System Support Windows 98/ME/2000/XP, Vista, 7, Linux 2.2+ or Mac OS X (Linux not supported by Atari)
* 1.0 GHz CPU Pentium III or Athlon (1.2 GHz CPU or faster recommended)
* 128 MB RAM (256MB RAM or greater recommended)
* 5.5 GB hard disk space
* DirectX 9.0b compatible 32 MB graphics card (64 MB NVIDIA or ATI hardware T&L card recommended)
* DirectX 9.0b compatible sound card
* 8x CD/6x DVD drive
* Internet (TCP/IP) and LAN (TCP/IP) play supported. Internet play requires a 33.6 kbit/s or faster modem (broadband recommended) | Input methods | Keyboard, Mouse, Joystick |
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'Unreal Tournament 2004', also known as 'UT2K4' and 'UT2004', is a futuristic first-person shooter computer game developed by Epic Games and Digital Extremes. It is part of the Unreal series of games and is the sequel to 2002's Unreal Tournament 2003 and the original Unreal Tournament.
Among significant changes to gameplay mechanics and visual presentation, one of the major additions introduced by Unreal Tournament 2004 is the inclusion of vehicles and the Onslaught game type, allowing for large-scale battles.
The game features all or most of the content of its predecessor, replacing it on the shop shelves. Unreal Tournament 2004 boxes sold in the United States include a $10 mail-in rebate requiring that a short form be completed and sent to the publisher along with a copy of the manual cover for Unreal Tournament 2003. Versions sold in the United Kingdom had a similar offer, but required sending in the play CD for Unreal Tournament 2003 instead.
Its successor, Unreal Tournament 3, was released on 19 November 2007.
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