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Aaron "ACE" Elam wins $200,000 Halo 4 Championships

Added: 07.09.2013 0:01 | 12 views | 0 comments


20-year-old takes down Justin 'iGotUrPistola" Deese at this weekend's Halo 4 Global Championships during PAX Prime to claim top prize.

20-year old Halo player Aaron "ACE" Elam has won $200,000 and the title of Champion in a final match over Justin "iGotUrPistola" Deese at this weekend's Halo 4 Global Championships held by 343 Industries at PAX Prime.

"This means everything to me," Elam said immediately after winning the championship. "I've been playing Halo since I was nine years old, and I have to say, the games against Deese were the most intense games of Halo in my entire life. I just can't believe this. I feel like I'm dreaming."

"I watched the final, like everyone, with my heart in my throat and I basically don't have any fingernails left," 343 Industries Franchise Director for Halo Frank O'Connor told GameSpot. "The Halo 4 Global Championship did something a little bit different, offering every kind of player, from every region of the world, a chance to compete and win a huge individual cash prize. And for the final to come down to a tie break, between two amazingly cool people, and two genuinely excellent players, was a sports fan's dream come true. Congratulations to both players and especially of course, to ACE for taking the prize. I am incredibly excited about the future of Halo in the competitive scene, and we can't wait to do something even cooler in the future.#148;

The best Halo players in the world were on-hand to play in 343's first worldwide Halo Championships, held at Seattle's Benaroya Hall--the same venue that hosted . 343 Industries chose Free For All (FFA) as the game type of choice for the competition, with 1v1 being played in the semifinals and grand finals. Former Major League Gaming pros were invited by 343, while others qualified through events from GamesCom and RTX. Over 100 players began competition on Friday night. 64 players continued on to Saturday evening, and only eight remained by finals day on Sunday to compete for $300,000.

Elam is no stranger to victory, having won championships at MLG's debut event at the Dallas Championships in 2011, and most recently winning the Arena Gaming League's eighth event in Knoxville, Tennessee for Halo 4. Even with those accomplishments, FFA is a different beast.

"In other Halo games I hadn't been the greatest FFA player, and I believe it was because I hadn't transitioned my playstyle from 4v4 to FFA," Elam tells GameSpot. "I don't know if it was because I hadn't played it enough, but I guess I just didn't know how to play it correctly. I played selfless in 4v4 and I didn't play selfish enough in FFA."

"Before the event, I was learning a lot about how I needed to approach the game in FFA. For example, to not be the initiator in fights, and instead wait for people nearby to start the battle and then come in and try to clean up. I learned that I needed to scan the map as quick as possible looking for weak players. If there weren't any, then you have to immediately worry about people spawning nearby you, and I would try to get first shot or sight on them. If I didn't, I waited until they got distracted by someone else."

Elam's newly practiced FFA skills earned him a place in Sunday's finals, among other players such as Deese, Ian "Enable" Wyatt, Bryan "Legit" Rizzo, and Cory "Str8 Sick" Sloss. A final kill by Elam in the waning moments of the Round of 8 FFA earned him a spot in the semfinals--and a 1v1 format to go with it.

"I actually had never played a 1v1 match until Sunday," Elam remarked about a tough finals day. "My first ever 1v1 in Halo was against Enable in warm-ups 3 hours prior to my semifinals match against Sloss. Coming into the event, I didn't think I could win, honestly."

The 1v1 games were played on the map Skyline, released in the Majestic Map Pack back in February. The map is small and symmetrical with a mixture of high and low spaces, with room for cover. Sloss earned himself a quick 4-1 lead with seven minutes remaining. With the pressure mounting, Elam got the kills he needed to bring it back and go on to win 9-7, advancing himself to the finals.

A win by Deese over Rizzo in the Semifinals set up the Finals match against Elam; one map for $200,000. With the crowd behind both players, the finals didn't disappoint, as Elam and Deese traded kill after kill with tie scores 3-3, 4-4, and 5-5. With one minute remaining, Deese scored a go-ahead kill to make it 6-5 and just a short moment away from victory. For the third time that day, Elam would not back down, tying it up with 25 seconds to go and escaping Deese's last-second aggressive move to send it into overtime.

"My goal was to get the power weapon and control," said Elam. "Getting the concussion rifle is the most important thing. If you don't have that, than I tried to use a variety of needler, boltshot, and assault rifle, and to make sure I put myself in positions to use those weapons effectively."

"While losing the game, I'm thinking 'I need to carefully move around the map and try to see him before he sees me.' That's basically the biggest advantage you could possible get. When I tied the game, I didn't think either of us would go for the win, so we just waited."

Overtime saw both players play both cautiously and aggressively, not wanting to make a mistake while trying to take advantage of any available opportunity. Elam would land a grenade onto Deese and send him running; moments later, Deese returned the favor. Deese piled on the aggression for the kill and the title, but Elam's defensive shots and positioning got him out of trouble, giving him an opportunity to take away all of Deese's shields. Another aggressive push by Deese was his downfall, and the final shots came from Elam, crowning him the Halo 4 Global Champion and making him $200,000 richer.

"No one besides select few friends and my brother thought I had a chance to win this."

"I learned from the previous game that he went straight for the concussion rifle bottom center so in the beginning I went to straight to watch it," said Elam. "I waited for him to make a mistake looking for me, and I caught him top center and he started running. I went back for the concussion rifle and pushed into the base because I knew he didn't know where I was and I wanted to flank him."

"Turns out he ended up top center with positioning on me so when I got weak I ran and the rest was just a battle. He came in flying at me which sort of gives me the advantage because it takes a second to get out of sprint. I jumped back and pulled out my battle rifle, and honestly didn't expect to see him there, I thought he would hide. It really was a sigh of relief at that point, and more of just shock and disbelief that I actually won."

"No one besides select few friends and my brother thought I had a chance to win this. I knew I was talented enough. I like being the underdog though, it motivates me immensely. All the hard work I put into this game finally paid off. I've played halo since I was nine, competitively since 2006. I've struggled so much to study hard in school and balance this game, I took tons of AP classes in high school and worked very hard."

The brother that supported him all the way is none other than Kyle "ElamiteWarrior" Elam, who previously won the National Championship and $50,000 along with it. Kyle Elam won his championship at the same time Aaron has now won his--at the young age of 20.

"I am still in disbelief of the events that corresponded this weekend," Kyle Elam told GameSpot. "I took ACE to his first event in 2005 when he was 12 years old. I always knew he had incredible skill, but just needed a little development. There is nothing better than watching someone that you care about more than yourself succeed. I was a little worried about the qualifiers and making it into the tournament and when I say that I mean for him really and not myself. I was way more confident in him than I was in myself this weekend. He has been playing out of his mind and was easily one of the top four players in the game. Besides being one of the best, you need to come ready to play, the term 'any given Sunday' seems only fitting with the magnitude and scale of this event."

"We talked for hours the night before the finals, strategizing, laughing about how crazy it would be to have the US Champion and the Global Champion in the same family. That's when I started to think and realized that it was five years ago, when I was 20, the same age ACE is now that I took my FFA Championship for $50,000. ACE has been the most underrated player in the game for five years now and I stand by that comment. People love flashy players, but what really wins you games are decision making and consistency, aspects of the game that unfortunately go unnoticed too often."

Although this tournament was a FFA instead of a traditional 4v4, Aaron "ACE" Elam is now considered the best Halo player in the world. Elam is modest about his accomplishments, but understands the gravity of the performance he just displayed.

"Honestly, as of right now, I don't see how you couldn't say that," said Elam. "Obviously all the pros are good and saying you're the 'best' could change any given day or time, it comes down to who played better that day/weekend. So yes I don#148;t disagree with that statement."

Catch GameSpot#148;s interview with Frank O'Connor on .

From: www.gamespot.com

Why The New Splinter Cell Is On My Blacklist - NAGF

Added: 27.08.2013 21:25 | 9 views | 0 comments


Rob from NAGF writes "Sam Fisher has moved away from his arthritic self and looks like hes been downing vitality yoghurts by the 8-pack. He glides through Libya, Marawa, Dallas and many more worldwide locations, with as much finesse as Ezio from Assassins Creed."

From: n4g.com

Dallas Cowboys Joseph Randle Talks EA Sports Madden NFL 25

Added: 16.08.2013 11:19 | 8 views | 0 comments


Immediately after getting his facial scan for EA Sports Madden NFL 25, Dallas Cowboys rookie Joseph Randle talks video game football in this exclusive interview.

From: n4g.com

The highs and lows of game development

Added: 12.08.2013 20:18 | 8 views | 0 comments


GamesRadar - Living the indie life ain't easy. When all you've got is yourself (and, maybe, a small group of others). That makes the lows lower, but it can also make the highs higher. Over the past few months, we sat down with the likes of Alex Neuse (Bit.Trip), Ian Dallas (Unfinished Swan), Shaw-Han Liem (Sound Shapes), and a host of other game developers to learn more about their moments of greatest doubt and thrilling triumph.

From: n4g.com

Rage Creative Director Matt Hooper Works at Oculus VR Now, Too

Added: 09.08.2013 1:18 | 10 views | 0 comments


Game Front: "Matt Hooper, the decade-long veteran of id Software who served as Creative Director on 2011s Rage, has an updated LinkedIn Profile. After officially parting ways with id and Bethesda roughly six months ago, Hooper is now the Director of Development in Oculus VRs new Dallas office."

From: n4g.com

John Carmack takes full-time job at Oculus Rift developer

Added: 07.08.2013 16:21 | 7 views | 0 comments


[UPDATE] Bethesda says Carmack's position at id Software is "unaffected" by chief technology officer role at Oculus VR.

[UPDATE] Bethesda has issued a statement saying that John Carmack will continue his role at id Software.

"John has long been interested in the work at Oculus VR and wishes to spend time on that project. The technical leadership he provides for games in development at id Software is unaffected," said a Bethesda spokesperson to GameSpot.

"My time division is now Oculus over Id over Armadillo," . "It is a big change of pace to go from working on carefully engineered code for the long haul to PANICKY STARTUP CODING FOR THE NEXT DEMO."

The original story is below.

John Carmack has taken a full-time job at the company making the Oculus Rift.

Carmack will now work full-time out of Oculus VR's new Dallas office as the company's chief technology officer.

#133;The dream of VR has been simmering in the background for decades, but now, the people and technologies are finally aligning to allow it to reach the potential we imagined,#133; said Carmack in a public statement.

#133;I#133;m extremely excited to make a mark in what I truly believe will be a transformative technology."

The development kit for the Oculus Rift VR headset began shipping in March 2013. No date for a consumer version of the technology has currently been made available.

Carmack was one of the co-founders of id Software in 1991, and has served as technical director at the Doom and Quake developer for over 20 years. The studio was independent until 2009, when it was acquired by Bethesda parent company ZeniMax Media.

id Software is currently working on .

From: www.gamespot.com

John Carmack takes full-time job at Oculus Rift developer

Added: 07.08.2013 15:23 | 7 views | 0 comments


Legendary programmer John Carmack joins Oculus VR as chief technology officer.

John Carmack has taken a full-time job at the company making the Oculus Rift.

Carmack will now work full-time out of Oculus VR's new Dallas office as the company's chief technology officer.

#147;The dream of VR has been simmering in the background for decades, but now, the people and technologies are finally aligning to allow it to reach the potential we imagined,#147; said Carmack in a public statement.

#147;I#147;m extremely excited to make a mark in what I truly believe will be a transformative technology."

The development kit for the Oculus Rift VR headset began shipping in March 2013. No date for a consumer version of the technology has currently been made available.

Carmack was one of the co-founders of id Software in 1991, and has served as technical director at the Doom and Quake developer for over 20 years. The studio was independent until 2009, when it was acquired by Bethesda parent company ZeniMax Media.

id Software is currently working on .

From: www.gamespot.com

A Quick Look at QuakeCon

Added: 04.08.2013 11:19 | 11 views | 0 comments


PixkBit | "Although QuakeCon hasnt wrapped up yet, it has pretty much settled into its groove until its Sunday conclusion. If you werent able to make it to Dallas for this years free gathering of FPS nuts, I snapped a few pictures to help give you a feel for the show."

Tags: Lots, Dallas
From: n4g.com

Pocket Gamer - Breach Clear Review

Added: 18.07.2013 17:16 | 16 views | 0 comments


Pocket Gamer - For Dallas Tanner, death was swift and ignoble. Bursting into the door of a tidy Kabul office occupied by Afghani terrorists, the brave fireteam leader made the fatal decision to turn right instead of left. As he blinked through the lens of a holographic sight trained on an innocent pot plant, behind him his smiling killer emptied several rounds into his backside.

From: n4g.com


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