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Reading Trophies Assassins Creed IV Black Flag - GamesReviews

Added: 27.01.2014 17:16 | 8 views | 0 comments


"If theres one thing pirates love, its trophies. Many a buccaneer has been educed to tears after learning just how many hours theyll need to put into Killzone: Shadow Fall, and there are still tales on the high seas about the one guy that didnt even manage to get down the pole in Ghostbusters. In Assassins Creed IV Black Flag, youll captain a ship and kill some templars, but how many people are there alongside you?"

From: n4g.com

Assassins Creed 4 Black Flag | Saving Privateer Kenway - CelticGamer

Added: 27.01.2014 15:16 | 6 views | 0 comments


When youve got something lying face down, apparently dead in the water then youd be forgiven for abandoning whatever it is to its watery fate and focusing your time on more important things like what to have for dinner. This was the situation Assassins Creed 3 found itself after a rather brutal reception. In short, it was an abysmal addition to the franchise and a stellar example of innumerable missed opportunities. As such, faith in the franchise dwindled to an ember as Ezio fan-boys walked away from the drowning Connor Kenway, that was, until Black Flag sailed onto PS4 and went all CPR on Ubisofts annual series.

From: n4g.com

Review: Assassin's Creed IV: Black Flag (PS4) - NWTV

Added: 25.01.2014 15:16 | 13 views | 0 comments


With the advent of a new console, there are several games that are released on both the old and the new console Assassin's Creed IV. Black Flag is one of them. In an earlier review on NieuwerwetsTV the game is discussed on the previous generation of consoles. Now the game is released for the new generation of consoles is of course the big question is whether there is a lot has changed.

From: n4g.com

Speelbaars Interview - In The Flow With Lumini

Added: 25.01.2014 1:16 | 11 views | 0 comments


Pixels for Breakfast had a great in-depth talk with the guys of Dutch indie studio Speelbaars about their unique upcoming flow game Lumini! Lumini can be described as a flow game where you are responsible for the survival of a species: the Lumini. In a world full of creatures that are out to get you, your task is to bring your swarm to safety. This will require players to split up their swarm and control both sides separately, breed new and better Lumini to replace the ones theyve lost, face dangerous monsters and solve multiple puzzles.

From: n4g.com

Call it a comeback: 2013 in numbers

Added: 24.01.2014 23:16 | 12 views | 0 comments


MCVUK : "The UK physical games market staged a comeback in 2013 with the help of new consoles, Grand Theft Auto V and FIFA. MCV analyses the figures. It was not quite a full recovery for the UK games market in 2013, but it was a record-breaking year nevertheless. Grand Theft Auto V took the plaudits becoming the fastest selling launch in history. It sold week one than Call of Duty: Ghosts, FIFA 14, Batman: Arkham Origins, Pokemon X, Pokemon Y, Assassin's Creed IV: Black Flag and Battlefield 4 put together, and by the end of the year had shifted an incredible 3.67m units. That's over 1m more than its nearest rival."

From: n4g.com

Valentines day Matching

Added: 24.01.2014 16:42 | 7 views | 0 comments


matching the same image first off all we show a original arrangement of a images in few seconds after it will be hide then you will find and match the correct images with in the time.If you match the all images it will move next level.Flip the Cards and match the Correct Objects using a click the image and flip the card the match the image Match the Box to Win the Game, Flip the Cards and match the Correct Objects

Tags: Flag
From: www.fupa.com

Assassin's Creed III: Liberation HD Review

Added: 24.01.2014 1:05 | 3 views | 0 comments


As a former exclusive on the PlayStation Vita, Assassin's Creed III: Liberation arrived in time for the 2012 holidays as a promising system seller for Sony's fledgling handheld. While it fell short of its lofty goal, Liberation was nonetheless an impressive showcase of possibilities for open-world play on the portable platform. Now that it has been released on the Xbox 360 and PlayStation 3, Assassin's Creed fans uninterested in the Vita can now experience all of the franchise's 18th-century storylines. Assassin's Creed: Liberation HD delivers what you would expect in upgraded visuals. And if you're hoping for the exact same gameplay that Vita owners experienced, you get that as well, even though it includes Liberation's original bugs.

Unlike other portable Assassin's Creed titles, Liberation continues the main narrative thrust of the major entries in the series. Aveline de Grandpre, the franchise's first playable female assassin, has intriguing ties to the protagonist of

It's easy to travel in the bayou.

If you're the type who expects HD remasters to be an opportunity for developers to fix the original version's bugs, expect some minor disappointments with Liberation HD. Don't be surprised if characters are positioned oddly during conversations, and don't expect rope swing functionality to work consistently. There are even issues that work to your benefit, such as when the game skips an entire combat sequence altogether. And while this game retains the series' notoriety system, it's easy to avoid confrontation. Guards are so slow to react to Aveline's presence that I didn't need to waste time tearing down wanted posters to decrease her notoriety.

Gerald's bland personality puts the "mild" in mild-mannered.

This ease of play speaks not only to Liberation HD's low difficulty level, but also to the lack of incentives to deviate from the storyline. The game isn't short on side missions, which include a foot race, the theft of a ship, and the freeing of slaves. Liberation HD does a poor job of letting you know that these missions exist, especially when the game doesn't raise financial hurdles that force you to raise funds and take a break from the story. Many missions in Assassin's Creed IV: Black Flag required money and resources, which was a minor problem that could be overcome by hijacking ships or taking on optional assassination assignments. Liberation rarely encourages you to pursue side tasks, even though it has an economy system where you can kill business rivals and take over their shops, thereby making goods cheaper for yourself. The problem is that you don't need to buy a lot of things, and the game's most useful items, like the poison and berserk darts, often auto-replenish as you progress through the story.

Attaching "HD" to a previously released game often means you're getting a high-definition remaster rather than a remake with visuals reconstructed from the ground up. Judging by the quality of the cutscenes, developer Ubisoft Sofia aspired to the latter but ended up with the former. The time and care it put into those cinematics is obvious, so it's disappointing that the gameplay and its bugs--issues that existed in the Vita version--didn't receive the same level of attention. I still recommend Assassin's Creed: Liberation for fans of the series, but it's hardly worth revisiting if you've completed the Vita version.

From: www.gamespot.com

Assassin's Creed III: Liberation HD Review

Added: 24.01.2014 1:05 | 2 views | 0 comments


As a former exclusive on the PlayStation Vita, Assassin's Creed III: Liberation arrived in time for the 2012 holidays as a promising system seller for Sony's fledgling handheld. While it fell short of its lofty goal, Liberation was nonetheless an impressive showcase of possibilities for open-world play on the portable platform. Now that it has been released on the Xbox 360 and PlayStation 3, Assassin's Creed fans uninterested in the Vita can now experience all of the franchise's 18th-century storylines. Assassin's Creed: Liberation HD delivers what you would expect in upgraded visuals. And if you're hoping for the exact same gameplay that Vita owners experienced, you get that as well, even though it includes Liberation's original bugs.

Unlike other portable Assassin's Creed titles, Liberation continues the main narrative thrust of the major entries in the series. Aveline de Grandpre, the franchise's first playable female assassin, has intriguing ties to the protagonist of

It's easy to travel in the bayou.

If you're the type who expects HD remasters to be an opportunity for developers to fix the original version's bugs, expect some minor disappointments with Liberation HD. Don't be surprised if characters are positioned oddly during conversations, and don't expect rope swing functionality to work consistently. There are even issues that work to your benefit, such as when the game skips an entire combat sequence altogether. And while this game retains the series' notoriety system, it's easy to avoid confrontation. Guards are so slow to react to Aveline's presence that I didn't need to waste time tearing down wanted posters to decrease her notoriety.

Gerald's bland personality puts the "mild" in mild-mannered.

This ease of play speaks not only to Liberation HD's low difficulty level, but also to the lack of incentives to deviate from the storyline. The game isn't short on side missions, which include a foot race, the theft of a ship, and the freeing of slaves. Liberation HD does a poor job of letting you know that these missions exist, especially when the game doesn't raise financial hurdles that force you to raise funds and take a break from the story. Many missions in Assassin's Creed IV: Black Flag required money and resources, which was a minor problem that could be overcome by hijacking ships or taking on optional assassination assignments. Liberation rarely encourages you to pursue side tasks, even though it has an economy system where you can kill business rivals and take over their shops, thereby making goods cheaper for yourself. The problem is that you don't need to buy a lot of things, and the game's most useful items, like the poison and berserk darts, often auto-replenish as you progress through the story.

Attaching "HD" to a previously released game often means you're getting a high-definition remaster rather than a remake with visuals reconstructed from the ground up. Judging by the quality of the cutscenes, developer Ubisoft Sofia aspired to the latter but ended up with the former. The time and care it put into those cinematics is obvious, so it's disappointing that the gameplay and its bugs--issues that existed in the Vita version--didn't receive the same level of attention. I still recommend Assassin's Creed: Liberation for fans of the series, but it's hardly worth revisiting if you've completed the Vita version.

From: www.gamespot.com


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