Prison Simulator
Prison Simulator is a brand new game developed by Baked Games.Take care about prisoners, trade with them or be strict and cruel. You decide.
manage the prison and fulfill your duties
deal with aggressive prisoners and the contraband
create personalities and style the prison
extend possibilities with downloadable content
Enjoy advanced plot and dialogues
Your life as a prison guard is going to end soon – your promotion is only 30 days away! However, the closer you get to this date, the harder your life is.
Play the role of a prison guard, survive to your promotion, balancing on a thin line between the satisfaction of the prison management and dangerous convicts!
Try a demo game and prove yourself!
Keep control… or at least try
Prison Simulator is about to be available on Steam soon!
Stay informed by adding the game to your wishlist.
The story of the 2010 film , directed by Denis Villeneuve, is a devastating Greek tragedy disguised as a modern political mystery. Based on Wajdi Mouawad’s play
The story begins in Montreal following the death of Nawal Marwan, a Middle Eastern immigrant. Her twin children, Jeanne and Simon, are left with a baffling will: they must deliver two sealed letters—one to a father they thought was dead and another to a brother they never knew existed [2, 5]. Incendies 2010 Film
The film’s final revelation is not a cheap shock; it is the logical, devastating sum of everything that came before. When Jeanne finally tracks down her mother’s past, she discovers that the man she was told was her father (the notary’s first letter) is also the man who gave the order to execute her mother’s first love. Furthermore, the missing brother (the second letter) is the product of a monstrous act of war—a child Nawal was forced to bear, then lost. The story of the 2010 film , directed
The story of the 2010 film , directed by Denis Villeneuve, is a devastating Greek tragedy disguised as a modern political mystery. Based on Wajdi Mouawad’s play
The story begins in Montreal following the death of Nawal Marwan, a Middle Eastern immigrant. Her twin children, Jeanne and Simon, are left with a baffling will: they must deliver two sealed letters—one to a father they thought was dead and another to a brother they never knew existed [2, 5].
The film’s final revelation is not a cheap shock; it is the logical, devastating sum of everything that came before. When Jeanne finally tracks down her mother’s past, she discovers that the man she was told was her father (the notary’s first letter) is also the man who gave the order to execute her mother’s first love. Furthermore, the missing brother (the second letter) is the product of a monstrous act of war—a child Nawal was forced to bear, then lost.