Friday, 18 October 2024
News with tag Bioshock  RSS
A Flawed Masterpiece: Revisiting Bioshock Infinite

Added: 23.04.2013 19:18 | 0 views | 0 comments


Now that the dust has settled on Irrational Games' lauded shooter, Sean takes a look at what worked and didn't work in the story and how it ties (or doesn't) into the gameplay and the world of Bioshock Infinite.

From: n4g.com

Bioshock Infinite Review [BuzzFocus]

Added: 23.04.2013 18:22 | 15 views | 0 comments


Seamless storytelling, clever but simple gameplay and emotionally invested characters are all fleshed out to make it a very worthwhile experience.

From: n4g.com

Bioshock Infinite DLC: six places I'd like Irrational to go next

Added: 23.04.2013 13:50 | 18 views | 0 comments


Back to Columbia, or off into the wide blue yonder?.
Thanks to Elizabeth's ability to tear away the curtain between dimensions, Bioshock Infinite is the game where anything can happen. Well, in theory. In practice, it's a game subject to much the same tactical considerations as many of its shabbier contemporaries, where the concept of multiple realities serves as a fancier way of facilitating the introduction of bullets to skulls, fists to faces.

From: www.oxm.co.uk

Watch The Bioshock Infinite Movie In 3.5hrs

Added: 23.04.2013 4:18 | 0 views | 0 comments


Super PolyPixel - Bioshock Infinite has been getting hype for a few years now, and the praise is overwhelming since its release. I unfortunately havent been privileged with a copy of my own yet, and have not seen actual gameplay either. Yes, I know, blasphemy! But as money and time is the enemy of every good gamer out there, you all understand my woes. So as I was roaming the internet the other day, I came across this little number that seems to be worth a watch, yet I fret to as I dont want it to become spoiler central for my latest Bioshock experience I have yet to delve into.

From: n4g.com

Bioshock Infinite: Empathising with the Handyman

Added: 22.04.2013 23:18 | 11 views | 0 comments


"The Handyman is sorely misunderstood by Columbias people, as a spectacle and technological wonder, not a person. As Booker walks through the streets of Shantytown, he comes across two Vox posing with the slumped body of a dead Handyman while their friend takes a photograph." Jack Bromley talks about the Handyman as a tragic figure, and how he fits into the Bioshock: Infinite universe and enhances its narrative themes. "Plenty have complained that they should have been featured more prominently as their omnipresence in the trailers suggested but like the Boys of Silence, theyre placed and distributed so that they can be perfectly appreciated as unique characters and not faceless recurring obstacles."

From: n4g.com

Bioshock Infinite blasphemy doesnt discriminate: ESRB

Added: 22.04.2013 22:19 | 11 views | 0 comments


The ESRB responds to the lack of religion descriptors in its Bioshock Infinite rating

From: n4g.com

Review: Bioshock Infinite

Added: 22.04.2013 21:18 | 40 views | 0 comments


"Bioshock Infinite is a hard game to judge. Do I critique it based off the original Bioshock, or as a stand alone entity? Certainly Bioshock was one of the most influential games of the last ten years, and fact has to be taken into consideration. Infinites comments on politics, religion and racemajor aspects of the experienceare also worthy of their own separate articles. Let us not forget the violence debate surrounding the game and whether or not the ending is a logical and satisfactory conclusion. Bear with me as I attempt to cram all this into one review. As Infinites protagonist Booker DeWitt enters the sky-city of Columbia for the first time, I can safely say you will be in awe. An example of extreme American exceptionialism, the bright colors and early 1900s aesthetic make Columbia one of the most imaginative, beautiful and disturbing videogame settings in recent memoryeven more so, dare I say, than Bioshocks underwater city of Rapture." - Lowell Bell

From: n4g.com

Bioshock Infinite Review | Action Button

Added: 22.04.2013 17:18 | 27 views | 0 comments


Tim Rogers: "Bioshock Infinite is the best game of all time... and the worst game of all time, inserted into opposite ends of a transdimensional nuclear supercollider."

From: n4g.com

Bioshock Infinite Review | Appstorm

Added: 22.04.2013 1:18 | 21 views | 0 comments


Appstorm writes: BioShock Infinite makes a place amongst the heavyweights of the FPS genre. The only flaw that I noticed in the game was that sometimes, at some situations, it started to show lethargy. The games pace started dropping but, thankfully, that did not last long and it was ready with its next set of surprises. However, even this little flaw felt as if the game was preparing me for something extraordinary, setting the stage for another masterpiece, putting forward a lull before the storm.

From: n4g.com


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