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From: www.gamesradar.com

17 Video Game Villains Who Had Hidden Hearts of Gold

Added: 02.07.2015 0:07 | 26 views | 0 comments


1. Clyde the Ghost from Pac-Man



Ready for some deep Pac-Man lore? In the original game, Clyde would often change his mind and shyly beat a retreat when chasing Pac-Man. In the TV series Pac-Man and The Ghostly Adventures, Clyde’s caring personality truly blossoms. Hold on to your pellets: Even more spoilers ahead! (Photo: Namco)


2. Bowser



Bowser’s definitely a creepy princess stalker, a crime for which there’s no redemption. But in Super Mario RPG and Bowser’s Inside Story, he pulls his own weight when in saving the mushroom kingdom. He cares. He just has a hard time showing it. (Photo: Nintendo)


3. Min from Far Cry 4



If you play on the main path, the warlord Min comes off as quite the sociopath. But, at the beginning of the game, if you take his instructions at face value and wait 15 minutes for him to return, you open up an alternate ending where Min shows off his sweet side. (Photo: Ubisoft)


4. Knuckles from Sonic & Knuckles



In Sonic 3, Knuckles gives off a bad first impression as one of Dr. Robotnik’s henchman. But he’s really just a victim of the Eggman’s lying schemes. When he finds out the truth, he ultimately joins Sonic’s side. He never drops the snarling attitude, though. (Photo: SEGA)


5. The White Witch from Ni No Kuni



Cassiopea is practically the Walter White of Ni No Kuni. The White Witch broke bad for all the right reasons. When she cast the powerful Ashes of Resurrection spell, she only meant to help those around her, but ended up causing massive despair ... just, you know, without the meth. (Photo: Bandai Namco)


6. King Dedede from Kirby’s Adventure



It’s easy to miss the real story behind Kirby. King Dedede is the true hero, one who has gone to great lengths to hide the powerful star rod. But Kirby’s bumbling ineptitude almost destroys Dream Land when he assembles the device anyway and delivers it right into Nightmare’s clutches. (Photo: Nintendo)


7. Godot from Phoenix Wright: Ace Attorney: Trials & Tribulations



This prosecuting attorney with the flashy cyborg visor has a temper even hotter than the black coffee he gulps during trial. But once you learn of his undying love for Maya and Mia Fey, you can’t help but feel sorry for the fella and everything he’s endured. (Photo: Capcom)


8. Alister Azimuth from Ratchet & Clank Future: A Crack In Time



You’d think someone who practically killed Ratchet twice is irredeemable. But we know the real Alister to be a judicious rebel leader who prioritizes the salvation of the Lombaxes above all else, even his own life. (Photo: Sony)


9. Kessler from Infamous



The first Infamous title had one of the most surprising twists in video game history. Kessler may appear dastardly at first blush (the dude did kill your girlfriend after all), but what if his actions are really forcing you to develop your skills to fight the true evil ahead? (Photo: Sony)


10. GLaDOS from Portal 2



Like many real people who suffer hardships, GLaDOS’s personality undergoes a transformation through the tumultuous events of Portal 2. After the indignity of being stuck inside a potato, she finds it in her electric heart to help save Chell. (Photo: Valve)


11. Yggdrasill from Tales of Symphonia



This half-elf has a surprising backstory as a victim of racial intolerance. After his sister’s death in a war of expulsion, he goes on a civil rights crusade, which is totally understandable. He just takes it a wee bit too far. (Photo: Namco)


12. Idenn from Fire Emblem: Binding Blade



This shaman may take the form of a loathsome dragon in the final boss fight, but in her defense, her soul was destroyed more than 1,000 years ago and transformed into a demon. If you defeat her in hard mode, she recovers her soul and you get a glimpse of the playful divinity she used to be. (Photo: Nintendo)


13. The Masked Man from Mother 3



The Masked Man initially appears as a force of evil who will do anything to stop Lucas from succeeding. But his sacrificial gesture in the final battle paves the way for the destruction of the Pork Army. (Photo: Nintendo)


14. Handsome Jack from Borderlands 2



Maybe it’s time to revisit Jack’s legacy with a more generous eye. His original utopian plan to get rid of the bandits in Pandora was probably well-intentioned. Even the biggest monsters are heroes in their own stories. (2K Games)


15. Kitaniji from The World Ends With You



Following the likes of Handsome Jack, Kitaniji is another villain whose overwhelming love for a city drives him toward evil actions. But can you really blame him for loving a city as cool as Shibuya? (Photo: Square Enix)


16. Marauder Shields from Mass Effect 3



The final random enemy of your journey sacrificed himself so you wouldn’t have to see the game’s disappointing ending. The outpouring of love for Marauder Shields on image boards has given him the status of a modern-day folk hero. We salute our fallen comrade. (Photo: Electronic Arts)


17. Edea Kramer from Final Fantasy VIII



It's hard to think of a villain who has a gentler side than Edea. When you initially encounter her, she's a merciless sadist. But as the story develops you learn she's just possessed, and actually cares for destitute children in an orphanage. She's the Mother Theresa of evil sorcerers. (Photo: Square Enix)


From: www.gamespot.com

15 big predictions for Sony#39;s E3 2015 press conference

Added: 01.06.2015 17:32 | 50 views | 0 comments


E3 is but two weeks away. That was quick. It seems like only this time last year we were posting a series of predictions articles for the show's main press conferences. And yet here we find ourselves again, with the first of a new batch we'll be running all week.

First up, it's Sony. The House of PlayStation is arguably in the strongest position of all of the big three, having enjoyed nigh consistently strong sales and community favour since the PS4's launch. But with the big games slowing down a little since Bloodborne, and The Order: 1886 having been more than a bit guff, what is it going to pull out of the bag to reignite momentum at this year's press conference? Well we reckon the following...

Oh Red Dead. Long have you been praised as the most intelligent, most unique, and most rousingly poignant game ever crafted by the good folks who brought us Manhunt. Long have you been said stable’s most inconvenient-to-actually-play game. PC version? Ha! Nope, no outing for Rockstar’s most visually splendid game there, on the platform able to render those picturesque desertscapes in the most ludicrous detail. Unless you’re still rocking ten-year-old hardware, one of gaming’s standout masterpieces is just Not For You. Surely it’s time to change that?

Rockstar has done a marvelous job with all-stops-pulled PC port of GTA5, so is it really so implausible that it should be considering a similarly bang-up job for Red Dead, alongside a version for a console famously announced as being basically a PC in a small box? No, no it is not. Expect a download-only release, with at least six-months exclusivity.

In an earnest effort to explore other kinds of deadly zones – dangerous areas, even – Guerrilla will break out of its grim-and-grey corridors to explore a new, vibrant planet. It’s likely the game codenamed ‘Horizon’, which surfaced via leaked artwork (see above) back in September 2014.

It’s all about robot dinosaurs, and burly men with bear-skin hats brandishing massive guns... and it looks remarkably like Destiny, at least on a visual level. Chances of it being a gorgeous, yet vaguely disappointing first-person shooter with terrible level-design? High.

With Sony promising that the Project Morpheus VR headset will launch during the first half of 2016, now's the time to start drumming up hype for all the gaming possibilities. One simple way to do that would be recreating a virtual space using existing assets from a current AAA title - say, The Witcher 3: Wild Hunt or Batman: Arkham Knight, perhaps - and demoing what it would be like to walk through the game world in sensory-encompassing first-person.

We also wouldn't be surprised if London Heist, with its double-Move-controller gunplay and immersive interrogation scenes, gets expanded from a demo into one of the first at launch.

As much as these E3 conferences are an opportunity for major publishers to trumpet successes and exciting new releases, it's also a chance for a public mea culpa, much like when Sony owned up to its 2011 network outage. It's here that Sony will finally apologize for the lack of the originally promised PS Plus version of Driveclub.

The retail game is largely fixed (and ", so E3's a good a time as any to re-introduce it and announce an official release date.

Sony just isn't too keen on ever explaining what those reasons are, and this E3 will be no exception. We'll get the standard platitudes ("We still stand behind Vita blah blah") and a couple of hand-me-down indies from PS3 and PS4.

Any further mention of it will either be entirely by accident, in a sizzle reel (featuring the song 'Shut Up and Let Me Go' by the Ting Tings), or to let yet another Vita exclusive actually have a chance at decent sales by making the leap to PS4.

Sony has to understand that The Last Guardian is now more successful as a punchline than it is as an actual game. For years Sony Japan's magnum opus has been a no-show. Genuine hope for it being a real thing is now about as plentiful as rocking horse poop.

Something has to be done about that. If there's not even a mention of it at this year's E3, we’re writing off the last six years as a wash, erasing its very (non)existence from our memories. Give us something either way, Sony. We need to celebrate, or we need to move on.

Sony doesn’t have a whole lot of games for 2015. So it needs to get the biggest third-party titles to cosy up with PS4 and spoon it gently in the night. Enter Star Wars: Battlefront, which will make more money this year than an entire room full of FIFA employees during World Cup selection week.

Sony will throw around phrases like “only on PlayStation” and “first on PS4” to refer to a week’s exclusivity on the third piece of Battlefront DLC, and an unlockable ‘light-brown’ Ewok skin-hat for your character. Oh, and the Beta will probably be exclusive to PS4. But it’s all about the Ewok hat.

‘HD’ updates of older games aren’t going away. We thought they were. We thought they were a blip. We thought they were just a quick and easy stopgap to plug the lacklustre gaming schedule at the start of this new generation. But no. It seems that they’re just a ‘thing’ now, like lensflare, or DLC, or dogs, or sandwiches. Capcom has even officially acknowledged the churning out of past glories as a major part of its future business plan. Yay! Woo! No, we’re not thrilled either.

But yeah, there’s totally going to be an Uncharted Trilogy collection, to fill the gap until the delayed Uncharted 4 makes a mockery of its title. We already know God of War 3 is going PS4, and we strongly suspect another big PS3 title will make the leap (well, it’s quite a small hop, actually) to new-gen.

Sony’s slick showreel of independent games will once again remind us of the power of the montage... and the need to get on with it during really long press conferences. The rapid presentation of clever little games bound for PlayStation may be shallow, but it will cement the indie game as a valuable commodity in making any console’s lineup surprising and diverse.

The soundtrack will obviously be something as hip, upbeat, and annoyingly catchy as ‘The Nights’ by Avicii. The montage will also cut in footage of attractive 20-somethings with perfect white teeth and obsessively-clipped facial-hair, clutching DualShocks while laughing maniacally and stroking each other’s arms.

The House of Wolves update is just out (and brilliant). There is buzz around the game is once more akin to that of a thousand bees. And there have been leaks, oh so many leaks, of information regarding Bungie’s next expansion, the really big one, codenamed Comet. And it's releasing in September, so it has to be time for a proper showing.

Although a multiformat game, Destiny’s public image is synonymous with Sony, the two having been tied up since launch by way of branded ads and exclusive strikes and multiplayer maps. If Bungie is going to show off Comet at E3 (or The Taken King, as it will be called), it will do it at Sony’s conference. And you can expect a higher, but proportionally similar, number of extra things for PlayStation players this time around. A couple of extra strikes, three new multiplayer maps, and maybe an upgrade to the Prison of Elders. Yeah, that sounds about right.

And, indeed, the only Vita game presented at the show. Thereby making it both the best and worst of Sony’s handheld in the same package. Not seen it? It’s a swipe-to-attack action game by the folks who made Guacamelee, with a wilfully Japanese art style. Kind people will compare it to Okami (thanks to the way you swipe to cut or draw attacks on screen), whereas others will likely see it as a posh version of Fruit Ninja.

At least one lunatic online will proclaim Severed to be ‘the game to save Vita’. It isn’t.

We know that will be out by March 31, 2016 at the latest, having been delayed out of 2015. So to make good on the extra waiting time, Naughty Dog will deliver a dazzling gameplay run-through, including archaeological hijinks, shootouts with armed goons, grappling-hook-enabled jumps, and more foreboding voiceovers from Sully.

It'll all end with another ominous line delivered by Troy Baker as Nathan's older brother (whose name will finally be revealed), then a fade to the confirmed release date for early next year.

No Man’s Sky is almost definitely going to be great. And after stealing E3 last year with that demo, before bundling E3 into the back of an unmarked van and taking it off to central Europe to be broken down and sold off, it is going to be Big News at Sony’s 2015 press conference.

But despite the dynamically generated, space-based explore-’em-up’s profile, a chunky proportion of the public are still a bit confused over what it actually is. Thus, expect a more guided, in-depth walkthrough on-stage, detailing on-planet gameplay, and probably a closer look at space combat too.

Last December, Final Fantasy series producer Shinji Hashimoto took the stage at the PlayStation Experience to announce the arrival of Final Fantasy 7 on the PS4… as a port of the PC version. Expert trolling aside, the port was slated to launch this spring. Spring is almost over, so what better way to announce the actual release date than at Sony's E3 conference?

And what if that release date was, oh, we don't know, immediately following the show? There's precedent: in , Sony announced the arrival of the PSOne version of the RPG classic during its E3 press conference and released it that same day.

Look, Sony doesn't need to do much with PS4’s actual hardware or software. While Xbox One remains a hideous console pariah, and Wii U an expensive child’s rattle, there’s no urgency for Sony to up its game with a price cut or hardware revision. Having said that, maybe we’ll see a 1TB PS4 announced at the show.

People will buy it because a) PS4 game installs are insanely large, and b) we need somewhere to store all those screenshots of us posing dramatically in Bloodborne, or dancing like a merry fool in-front of the Cryptarch in Destiny (as he gazes into the middle distance with a look of utter contempt on his stupid face).

Getting The Band Back Together A Rock Band Retrospective

Added: 15.03.2015 20:18 | 32 views | 0 comments


NGB Wrote: "The stage lights burn hot on my face as I clutch the guitar, my left hand carefully positioned over the neck, right hand ready to hit the strings like my life depended on it. The crowd are restless; they dont know whats coming next. I do. Ive seen the set list. This ones a show stopper, one that theyll remember for weeks to come. I level my breathing, nervousness setting in as the singer starts up. Carry on my wayward son! Therell be peace when you are done Dont mess this up, I think and then the drums strike, signalling to the rest of the band to begin. My fingers press hard onto the buttons of my guitar and I wait, buttons?!"

From: n4g.com


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