Le français est une langue romane parlée par environ 175 millions de personnes dans le monde. Aujourd'hui, il est utilisé dans tous les pays du monde, y compris en France, Belgique, Canada, Suisse, Luxembourg, Monaco, Algérie, Cameroun, Haïti, Liban, Madagascar, Martinique, Monaco, Maroc, Niger, Sénégal, Tunisie, Vietnam, et est une langue officielle dans 29 pays ainsi que diverses institutions internationales telles que les Nations unies et l'Union européenne. Il est souvent considéré comme l'un des plus beaux et romantiques langues dans le monde et, en tant que langue étrangère, est la deuxième langue la plus enseignée dans le monde après l'anglais.
Translated:
French is a Romance language spoken by about 175 million people worldwide. Today, it is used in all countries of the world, including France, Belgium, Canada, Switzerland, Luxembourg, Monaco, Algeria, Cameroon, Haiti, Lebanon, Madagascar, Martinique, Monaco, Morocco, Niger, Senegal, Tunisia , Vietnam, and is an offi...
EA Sports have decided who has made the French Ligue 1 Team of the Season and these chosen few will have a special card released for FIFA Ultimate Team
The old-fashioned fantasy role-playing game isnt as common as it once was, but every once a while a new one will come out. BioWare currently still holds the belt for reigning champion of the genre in the West, even if they lost some shine with Dragon Age II. CD Projekt, from Poland, is another developer thats established a good reputation for itself. Now we have Spiders, a French studio based in Paris, dipping their toe into the action RPG arena while things are quiet. And its good timing for them because it gives this uneven RPG a chance to play where theres no serious competition around. At least on current gen systems.
EA Sports have decided who has made the French Ligue 1 Team of the Season and these chosen few will have a special card released for FIFA Ultimate Team
The old-fashioned fantasy role-playing game isnt as common as it once was, but every once a while a new one will come out. BioWare currently still holds the belt for reigning champion of the genre in the West, even if they lost some shine with Dragon Age II. CD Projekt, from Poland, is another developer thats established a good reputation for itself. Now we have Spiders, a French studio based in Paris, dipping their toe into the action RPG arena while things are quiet. And its good timing for them because it gives this uneven RPG a chance to play where theres no serious competition around. At least on current gen systems.
May is the month for E3 predictions for us at GameRevolution, and the Ubisoft press conference, as it does on yearly basis, forces us to remind ourselves of what the developer has on the horizon. One of the highlights is Valiant Hearts: The Great War, which at first glance might seem like a Japanese strategy RPG based on World War I, something on the lines of . Or something like that.
But it's actually a logic puzzle adventure based on real-life letters written during the war with a story centered around four strangers helping a young German soldier return to his love. Not what you were expecting, huh? During the start of the war in the summer of 1914, the French government mandates that all Germans must leave the country, separating husband Karl from his wife and her father Emile. While Karl is forced into the German military, Emile is conscripted into the French army, leading to a literal conflict of interest.
"We wanted to do a game about the war but not a war game, so that's why you don't kill people. The war kills them, but you don't kill them." That's what lead designer Julian Chevalier said when I asked him about the concept behind Valiant Hearts: The Great War, Ubisoft's upcoming game about World War I.
When I played Valiant Hearts recently at a preview event, I saw that the game wastes no time in putting a human face on war, focusing not on military strategy and the motivations of huge political powers but on how the machinations of those powers impacted the lives of ordinary people. The game starts as Karl, a German who has been living in France with his wife and newborn child, is forcibly separated from his family when the war breaks out. Back in Germany, Karl is conscripted into the German army, while his wife's father, Emile, is forced to enlist on the French side; Valiant Hearts isn't a story of good versus evil, but of regular people swept up in a conflict that is beyond their control.
"We wanted to do a game about the war but not a war game, so that's why you don't kill people. The war kills them, but you don't kill them." That's what lead designer Julian Chevalier said when I asked him about the concept behind Valiant Hearts: The Great War, Ubisoft's upcoming game about World War I.
When I played Valiant Hearts recently at a preview event, I saw that the game wastes no time in putting a human face on war, focusing not on military strategy and the motivations of huge political powers but on how the machinations of those powers impacted the lives of ordinary people. The game starts as Karl, a German who has been living in France with his wife and newborn child, is forcibly separated from his family when the war breaks out. Back in Germany, Karl is conscripted into the German army, while his wife's father, Emile, is forced to enlist on the French side; Valiant Hearts isn't a story of good versus evil, but of regular people swept up in a conflict that is beyond their control.