Worms Reloaded For Mac Os



Worms Reloaded
Developers
Linux
Release dates
WindowsAugust 26, 2010
macOS (OS X)May 17, 2011
LinuxOctober 15, 2013
Reception
Metacritic79
IGDB80
  • 1Availability
  • 2Game data
  • 5Audio
  • 6Network
  • 8Other information

8/10 - Download Worms 3D Mac Free. Worms 3D is a version of the classic Worms for Mac but in 3D. Take part in the ultimate battle, defeat your rival team and make the most of all your weapons. Worms 3D is a turn-based military strategy game developed by Team 17 and that stars the famous worms of. The turn-based comic mayhem is back in Worms™ Special Edition for Mac. In a game of Worms™, each player takes turns to pick off their opponents’ worms using a host of crazy weapons and crafty tactics. Worms die if they lose all of their health, or if they drown in the water. The last player standing when the dust settles is declared the.

Warnings

The macOS (OS X) version of this game does not work on macOS Catalina (version 10.15) or later due to the removal of support for 32-bit-only apps.
⤏ Go to series page
Worms1995
Worms 21997
Worms Pinball1998
Worms Armageddon1999
Worms World Party2001
Worms Blast2002
Worms 3D2003
Worms Forts: Under Siege2004
Worms 4: Mayhem2005
Worms Reloaded2010
Worms Crazy Golf2011
Worms Ultimate Mayhem2011
Worms Revolution2012
Worms Clan Wars2013
Worms World Party Remastered2015
Worms W.M.D2016
Worms Rumble2020

Key points

DLCs only available on Windows.[1]
No cross-platform multiplayer.[2]

General information

Unofficial Worms Wiki
Dream17 Softography
Steam Community Discussions

Availability[edit]

SourceDRMNotesKeysOS
Amazon.com Game of the Year Edition.
GamersGateGame of the Year Edition also available.
GamesplanetGame of the Year Edition also available.
Green Man GamingGame of the Year Edition also available.
Humble StoreGame of the Year Edition also available (Steam only)
DRM-free version doesn't include online multiplayer.[3]
SteamGame of the Year Edition also available.

DLC and expansion packs

NameNotes
Forts Pack
The 'Pre-order Forts and Hats' DLC Pack Initially available as exclusive pre-order content
Puzzle Pack
Retro Pack
Time Attack Pack
Soundtrack
Singleplayer DLC

Game data[edit]

Worms Reloaded Mod

Worms Reloaded For Mac Os

Configuration file(s) location[edit]

SystemLocation
Windows <path-to-game>local.cfg[Note 1]
macOS (OS X)
Linux $XDG_DATA_HOME/Team17/WormsReloaded/
This game follows the XDG Base Directory Specification on Linux.
For

Save game data location[edit]

SystemLocation
Windows
macOS (OS X)
Linux $XDG_DATA_HOME/Team17/WormsReloaded/
Steam <Steam-folder>/userdata/<user-id>/22600/remote/

Save game cloud syncing[edit]

Video[edit]

Video settings.
Graphics featureStateWSGFNotes
Widescreen resolution
Multi-monitor Resolution can be set via local.cfg in game folder, terrain beyond 16:9 won't appear unless centered.[4]
Ultra-widescreen Resolution can be set via local.cfg in game folder, terrain beyond 16:9 won't appear unless centered.[4]
4K Ultra HD
Field of view (FOV)
WindowedCheck Worms Reloaded Windowed Loader (not tested).
Borderless fullscreen windowedSee the glossary page for potential workarounds.
Anisotropic filtering (AF)See the glossary page for potential workarounds.
Anti-aliasing (AA)See the glossary page for potential workarounds.
Vertical sync (Vsync)
60 FPS and 120+ FPS

Input[edit]

Keyboard input settings.
Worms
Keyboard and mouseStateNotes
Remapping
Mouse acceleration
Mouse sensitivity
Mouse input in menus
Mouse Y-axis inversion
Controller
Controller support
Full controller support
Controller remapping[5]
Controller sensitivity
Controller Y-axis inversion
Additional information
Controller hotplugging
Haptic feedback
Simultaneous controller+KB/M

Audio[edit]

Audio settings.
Audio featureStateNotes
Separate volume controlsMusic and effects
Surround sound
Subtitles
Closed captions
Mute on focus lost

Localizations

LanguageUIAudioSubNotes
English
Czech
French
German
Italian
RussianFan translation by «ENPY Studio»
Spanish

Network[edit]

Multiplayer types

TypeNativePlayersNotes
Local play4 Hot seat
LAN play
Online playNot cross-platform. DRM-free versions do not support online play.[3]

Issues fixed[edit]

List
Fixes for various issues can be found on this Steam Users' Forum thread by the developers.

Other information[edit]

API[edit]

Technical specsSupportedNotes
Direct3D9Windows only
OpenGL2.1Linux and macOS only
Executable32-bit64-bitNotes
Windows
macOS (OS X)This 32-bit-only macOS game does not work on macOS Catalina (10.15) or later.
Linux

System requirements[edit]

Windows
Minimum
Operating system (OS)XP, Vista, 7
Processor (CPU)1.25 GHz AMD Athlon or Intel equivalent
System memory (RAM)1 GB
Hard disk drive (HDD)2 GB
Video card (GPU) Nvidia GeForce4 or equivalent
128 MB of VRAM
macOS (OS X)
Minimum
Operating system (OS)10.6
Processor (CPU)1.83 GHz Intel Core Duo or better
System memory (RAM)1 GB
Hard disk drive (HDD)2.7 GB
Video card (GPU) Nvidia GeForce 8600
AMD Radeon X1600
Linux
Minimum
Operating system (OS)Major Linux Distributions from 2010
Processor (CPU)2 GHz
System memory (RAM)1 GB
Hard disk drive (HDD)3 GB
Video card (GPU) OpenGL 2.1 compatible

Notes

  1. When running this game without elevated privileges (Run as administrator option), write operations against a location below %PROGRAMFILES%, %PROGRAMDATA%, or %WINDIR% might be redirected to %LOCALAPPDATA%VirtualStore on Windows Vista and later (more details).

References

  1. https://steamcommunity.com/app/22600/discussions/0/792924412457445435/#c666824801249917794
  2. https://steamcommunity.com/app/22600/discussions/0/846959520869456924/#c792923684228735428
  3. 3.03.1Humble Bundle's DRM-free version of Worms Reloaded does not support online multiplayer - News - Articles - Articles - PCGamingWiki Community
  4. 4.04.1Worms Reloaded - last accessed on May 30, 2018
  5. Verified by User:Rose on 2018-05-30
    Tested with an Xbox controller.
The most threatening aspect of computer worms as a type of malware is that they are self-replicating. Where viruses sometimes need to hook up to a specific type of computer program or be actively controlled by a hacker in order to work, worms are so dangerous because they start cloning themselves pretty much the moment they hit your computer. The goal of worms is twofold: first, they seek to exploit known vulnerabilities in an operating system; second, they seek to spread as far as they can, using computer networks, email attachments, file sharing networks, and any number of other methods to move from one computer system to the next.

What Worms Are Used For: An Example

That’s not to say that worms are exactly the mindless cancer of the computer world. On the contrary, these malicious programs do send data back to a control server, and they can be controlled to help hackers achieve specific goals.

Worms Reloaded For Mac Os Versions

For instance, when a website goes down as part of a DDoS (Distributed Denial of Service) attack, the root cause is often a worm that has infected a large number of machines. The hacker who created the worm is then able to create a botnet army with these compromised computers, and can use them to flood a specific target site with huge amounts of traffic or data, essentially killing the bandwidth of the target and resulting in a denial of service for the site. DDoS attacks are difficult to protect against for website administrators, simply because the attack is coming from so many different sources. All of the machines infected with the worm are essentially part of the attack, making it impossible to block specific IP addresses or even distinguish legitimate traffic from malicious traffic.

Worms in History

One of the most notorious computer worms in history was also one of the first. Written by a graduate student at Cornell University, the worm in question—called the Morris worm—was launched in November 1988, and quickly spread from computer to computer. Like other worms since, the Morris worm operated by exploiting known vulnerabilities in a specific operating system—in this case, Unix. Though originally intended as a harmless technology test, the worm was coded in such a way that it would infect some computer systems more than once, which resulted in computer crashes, denial of service attacks across the Internet, and potentially up to $10 million in damage. The estimate is that the Morris worm infected about 10% of the computers connected to the Internet at the time. While it’s unlikely that a worm could ever have such a far-reaching impact today—thanks to our knowledge of worms and the cyber-security safeguards that are in place on most computers and networks—it’s still frightening to think of the kind of a damage that a worm could do if it infected 10% of the Internet in 2015.

Worms on Mac OS X

Cached

Luckily for Mac users, worms still haven’t really made their way to OS X. In the past few years, we’ve seen a huge increase in the number of trojan horses, keyloggers, and other types of malware that can infect machines running Mac OS X. However, a Google search for “Mac worms” should reveal that there are no major worm infections to worry about on Mac… yet. According to a Wired article published in August 2015, researchers have created “the first firmware worm that attacks Macs.” What this article essentially proves is that there is nothing about Macs on either a hardware or software level that will prevent worms from infecting OS X computers or spreading from one Mac to the next. A firmware worm hell-bent on attacking Macs could be particularly damaging, since, as the Wired piece notes, fixing the issue would require users to open up their Macs and “electrically reprogram the chip.”Granted, not all worms would impact a Mac’s firmware. Firmware consists of programs or data that are installed to a system’s read-only memory (ROM), after which they cannot be removed. Many worms, while dangerous and destructive, do not have this level of permanence. Still, the point is that the potential is there for Macs to be hit with a catastrophic worm attack.So how can you protect yourself from worm infection? Since worms exploit known operating system vulnerabilities, always keeping your Mac fully up-to-date with all updates and security patches should reduce the likelihood of a worm being able to exploit your machine. Beyond updates, just use common sense in using the Internet: don’t open emails or attachments from people you don’t know or don’t trust, don’t use public file sharing networks, don’t click on links that look spammy, and always run firewall and antivirus software on your system.