Unblock Files [hot] (2024)

Founded in 1995, GSC Game World has become the most renowned game development studio in Ukraine and a leading developer in Europe. Since 2004 the proprietary worldwide publishing branch has been operating within the company.

The revolutionary Cossacks: European Wars RTS title became the company's first hit, selling, along with its two add-ons, over 5 million copies worldwide.

In 2004 the studio enjoyed its first experience of working on a Hollywood movie license, while developing the tie-in RTS based on Oliver Stone's blockbuster film Alexander. The game was released simultaneously with the movie and was self-published by GSC in former USSR territories.

Since August 2004, GSC World Publishing has launched 7 projects: Alexander (2004), Cossacks 2: Napoleonic Wars (2005), Cossacks 2: Battle for Europe (2006), Heroes of Annihilated Empires (2006), S.T.A.L.K.E.R.: Shadow of Chernobyl (2007), S.T.A.L.K.E.R.: Clear Sky (2008), S.T.A.L.K.E.R.: Call of Pripyat (2009).

In April 2007 the company's most ambitious project - Survival FPS S.T.A.L.K.E.R.: Shadow of Chernobyl, set in the near-future Chornobyl exclusion zone, was released worldwide. GSC World Publishing was in charge of publishing the title in former USSR territories, while THQ Inc. operated the worldwide release.

The game received numerous awards at some of the biggest international trade shows, and received high critical acclaimed from both print and online media and from the players themselves. The success of the game has been proven not only by the 'Game of the Year' and 'Most Atmospheric Shooter' awards, but also by maintaining top spots on sales charts.

In the former USSR states alone, the game sold over half a million copies in the first two weeks. With the two subsequently released add-ons, the worldwide sales of the S.T.A.L.K.E.R. game series approach five million copies to-date.

Following the strategy of further brand development, GSC Game World initiated a series of S.T.A.L.K.E.R.-based novels (published in Russian and German), and have sold over 5 million copies overall.

Cossacks 3, released in September 2016, put furious battles of XVII-XVIII centuries into 3D.

Unblock Files [hot] (2024)

It doesn’t always explain why a file is locked, just unlocks it. And on system-critical files (e.g., inside C:\Windows ), it might fail silently. Also, no 64-bit specific version — though it runs fine on modern Windows 10/11.

Here’s an interesting, balanced review of Unblock Files (assuming you’re referring to the file recovery/unlocking utility, often used to delete or rename “locked” files on Windows): ★★★★☆ (4/5)

It’s absurdly simple. Drag and drop the problematic file or folder onto the interface, click “Unblock,” and within a second, the lock vanishes. No installation, no registry edits, no command-line voodoo. It works on everything from INI files locked by a crashed app to entire folders held hostage by a misbehaving antivirus. Under the hood, it forces handles closed — similar to LockHunter or IObit Unlocker — but without bloatware or upgrade nags.

You know that moment of pure frustration: you try to delete a stubborn folder, and Windows spits back “The action can’t be completed because the file is open in another program” — but no program admits to having it open. Enter , a portable, 200KB utility that feels like a master key for file system handcuffs.

For everyday users wrestling with a “file in use” nightmare, it’s a lifesaver. For IT pros, it’s a quick, portable tool to keep on a USB stick. Just don’t expect forensic-level insights. Think of it as a lockpick, not a security camera.

A healthy dose of “Are you sure you want to delete this?” common sense.

Unblock Files [hot] (2024)

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