ESL Pro League Winter: Groups and schedule
Added: 10.04.2015 4:25 | 21 views | 0 comments
The LAN Finals of the 2014/15 Winter season of ESL Pro League kicks off live in couple of hours directly from the studio in Cologne, Germany.
From:
www.sk-gaming.com
| 5 Games That Totally Deserve An Early Demo
Added: 01.04.2015 3:18 | 13 views | 0 comments
BagoGames
Final Fantasy XV: Episode Duscae and Metal Gear Solid V: Ground Zeroes gave players some of the best previews they could give. Visuals, story, gameplay you name it, they gave us a good whiff of all of them in an early package. In just a few hours, they showed us just how great their final games just might be. They shouldnt be alone, though. Weve been anticipating (or dreading) plenty of games for years and here are five of them that deserve the same treatment.
Tags: Games, Gear, Metal, Metal Gear, Solid, Fantasy, Episode, Gear Solid, Final, Final Fantasy, Earth, Ground, Zeroes, Ground Zeroes
From:
n4g.com
| Dave#39;s Monthly Meikle-hammering... Friends are overated
Added: 31.03.2015 16:30 | 29 views | 0 comments
We love games, and so does OPM's bitter Scotsman Dave Meikleham. But sometimes it all get's a bit too much and his angry-glands kick into sweaty overdrive.
Here he'll tell you what's most got his ire. This month...Why friends aren't everything
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Stop forcing me to have pals, video games! Look, I’m perfectly happy being Norman No Mates. I hate the world and it hates me right back. It’s a situation I’m comfortable with. I may be a cantankerous sod, but my PS4 shouldn’t punish me for being such a hate-filled social leper. Meiksy’s gaze of scalding fury is focused on you, Destiny.
You know how long I’ve been after the Crota’s End Titan Raid helmet? About 30 friggin’ hours. damn you to moon hell, Crota! The reason I’ve been unable to obtain said shiny head trinket: I can’t get five actual human beings to go through the bloody Raid with me.
Contrary to my near constant Scottish surliness I do actually possess living, breathing human friends. However, having five other chums who all play Destiny and getting those compadres to all give up hours of their spare time on the same evening is a strategic undertaking of such Scrotum-crushing savageness, it’d have even Sun Tzu blubbering into his famous book. God I hate my Titan’s hat.
A matchmaking option in Bungie’s MMO hybrid would certainly improve my chances of bagging a magic space cap, then. Yet interweb buddying up can’t fix all my epically moany PSN problems. Just take Evolve. The games I’ve played with randoms so far have devolved into almighty monster-slaying clusterf**ks; a by-product of a group of silent strangers teaming up and failing to talk.
To get the most out of Turtle Rock’s monster-minded shooter, constant communication is required at all times to use your group of Hunters combining their abilities effectively. That means you really have to play with at least three actual chums who all own the game. Bottom line: freddy friendless is royally screwed.
Meiksy angry! Meiksy smash! Yes, it’s that time of the month for your favourite Highlander to vent his furious neeps-loving spleen. This month, my peppery wrath is focused squarely on video game ‘heroes’… specifically clean-cut ones designed and approved by soul-evaporating committee thinking. The next games character I see wearing any combination of hoodie/trenchcoat/cap is so getting a Glesga Kiss to the face.
Stop making everyone so damn good at everything! I don’t want Arno leaping across Notre Dame in a single bound.
I’d rather the cack-shinned hobbler who can barely shimmy through an open window without squirming around like he’s attempting to solve advanced calculus while Mary Antoinette hurls rotten Escargot at him. Preferably, physical and physiological shortcomings wouldn’t come via glitches, either; but hey, I’ll take character weakness wherever I can get my dirty mitts on it.
Y’know what’s interesting: human flaws. I don’t want Johnny Chiselled Chest punching terrorism in the pelvis while letting off patriotic one-liners in between necking a hapless damsel. No, I want self-destructive jerkweeds who are crippled by faults. I’d rather a middle-aged alcoholic with a Burger Shot addiction or a fondness for supping Kong Whisky at 6am in a bar in Rio. Never change, Mr De Santa/Mr Payne.
Just look at Life Is Strange or Grim Fandango. While the parallels between a failing skeleton travel agent and two troubled young women aren’t immediately apparent, stare a little closer and you’ll see characters defined by struggles and insecurity. Sod off perfection! Aiden Pearce and his perfect coat lapels can do one by comparison. It’s time to start embracing glorious failure, devs.
Urge to rant… rising. Yes, I’m feeling as agitated as ever this month. Blame my dour, super sweary demeanour on the absolute savaging my poor ear holes have been forced to endure these past few months. Don’t get me wrong, my lugs are happy to put up with the booming noise of COD gunfire until the deaf cows come home. What they can’t stand? The phoned-in awfulness of a disinterested Hollywood actor.
Like many of you, my ears were the subject of a brutal beatdown back in September, when Peter Dinklage put a monotone mangling on Destiny’s (admittedly limited) script. That Mr Rinky Dink avoids the full extent of my terrible tartan wrath is because a) I want to have Tyrion Lannister’s babies and b) his phoned-in patter partially suited the game’s dull droid.
Of course, reasoned discourse has about as much place in this column as Peter Andre at a Mensa convention. That’s why I’m going to tell the entire cast of the Nostromo to royally sod off for their part in Alien: Isolation’s recent DLC. The original cast of Ridley Scott’s sci-fi terror sound as wooden as Pinocchio’s nether regions and the comatose efforts of Tom Skerritt and Veronica Cartwright should replace sheep as the nation’s go-to sleep aid.
Even my beloved Metal Gear can’t escape my straw-berry blonde fury. Say what you want about David Hayter, at least the former voice of Snake sounded half interested. By comparison, Kiefer Sutherland may as well be snoring into a mic for all the emotion he unleashes in Ground Zeroes.
Any big actor who treats VO work with all the enthusiasm of a PPI claim checker is an utter berk. Just look at the calibre of performance GTA V enjoys from little known thesps and tell me Kief and co shouldn’t be ashamed.
You know what really boils my potato? Well, aside from that deep-fat fryer currently on standby in my kitchen for emergency Mars Bar batterings. That’s right: Day One patches. They really are getting out of hand now. Not to point any judgemental digits, but there’s more than one big-hitter we had to drop from the magazine at short notice because of promised-but-not-delivered-on-time launch day download fixes.
Even some of the games that made it still sit squarely in the jerkwad corner. Just look at The Evil Within; a game OPM thoroughly enjoyed but one that throws a techy tantrum should you not have web access. Minus the v1.01 patch, Mikami’s horror shudders around up to 10fps slower than the patched game in certain sections.
We may well live in the magical age of the interwebs, but developers are using Day One patches as far too much of a cheeky crutch. In the era of PS2 and before, your game had to be 100% finished by the time it hit shelves. There was no do-over for the likes of MGS2 or GTA III. If those classics had been blighted by terminal lag or game-breaking glitches that would have been the whole, sad ball game.
The alarming rate of Day One patches in the last few years is bordering on creating a culture of inequality. Some poor sheep farmer in John O’ Groats shouldn’t be forced to endure an experience vomited from hell because he can’t get his PlayStation 4 online through no fault of his own.
Do post-launch patches help devs tweak tasty new games and make them even better? Sure. But too many studios now treat Day One as the beginning of months of colonic irrigation, not the end of a hard-earned journey.
Tags: Evil, PlayStation, Dirt, Mask, Star, Gear, Arts, Daly, When, Kong, Black, Jump, Metal, Metal Gear, Live, There, Grab, While, Help, Kids, Shop, John, Rage, Destiny, Norman, Peter, Turtle, David, Chevy, Ground, Snake, Titan, Soul, About
From:
www.gamesradar.com
| 10 of the best standalone DLC packs
Added: 27.03.2015 14:00 | 42 views | 0 comments
Today sees the release of Forza Horizon 2 presents Fast Furious, a condensed nugget of fuel-injected beauty from Playground Games. It's also that increasingly common thing, a standalone DLC pack, derived from the game it uses for its name, but different enough to warrant opening it up to a whole new audience.
Due to what I imagine are world-spanning advertising concerns, it is also totally free until 10th April, which is magnificent news. Remember that brilliant Forza Horizon 2 demo? Bin it - this is a full (if miniaturised) game, that invokes the oeuvre of both Vin Diesel and Dwayne 'The Rock' Johnson.
That fact alone will more than likely make it a better game than Forza Horizon 2 in the eyes of some people, which got me to thinking - what are the best standalone DLC packs ever to hit Xbox consoles, and were they better than the games that spawned them? Here are 10 answers to that two-part question.
If Halo is gaming's Blur (honestly, just go with this) - world-conquering excellence beloved by all - then ODST is its Gorillaz - an arty endeavour that achieved success on its own terms. It's a side-project through and through, an indulgence for everyone making it. Bungie got to play with the design dynamics of weaker characters, write a sci-fi detective story, hell, even Martin O'Donnell wrote an entirely new, jazz-influenced soundtrack for this single game. It's a beautiful little thing, enriching the series, but warping it to its own ends.
Better than the original?: Ask the right person on the right day, and you'll get a definite yes. Halo 3 was very much a continuation of a formula - this felt like a line in the sand, and its influence on the later games is undeniable.
Oh, nothing to see here, just Rockstar changing the medium again. This combined package of the Ballad of Gay Tony and The Lost and the Damned DLC is the moment at which Rockstar realised that its peerless world-building could be used in a whole new way - to tell multiple stories in a single location. Looked at in that light, it almost certainly marked the moment at which the studio decided to create GTA V's astounding triple-header story mode.
Better than the original?: If we're talking purely about story - because that's what the Episodes were truly about - then yes. Mr. Bellic was cool and all, but his rags to rampage story was a little predictable - these were far tricate.
Well, obviously. It's become increasingly normal to take the mechanics of a game and place them in a totally new context, but it gained some serious traction here. John Marston's alternate zombie reality was a pulpy thrill, a total departure from the sunbaked drama of the main game and a chance for Rockstar's writers to flex their comedy muscles a little more.
Better than the original?: Not really - the heart of Red Dead's genius was its atmosphere. This is still a truly wonderful game, but it's best looked at as a counterpoint to its stellar big brother.
This is less a new take on an old game and more an excuse for the Far Cry team to cleance all of Vaas' high-falutin' drug trip bollocks from their systems with something totally stupid. An '80s pastiche of the highest order, it reinvents the main game in order to include neon weaponry, middle fingers and the voice of Micheal 'bloke from Terminator' Biehn. It also unwittingly kicked off Ubisoft's brilliant programme of "cooldown" games, letting their franchise-endowed devs make what they want for a time.
Better than the original?: Maybe? It very much depends on what you want from your open-world shooter. If the answer is "to feel like I'm actually inside that VHS tape I found behind a bus stop in 1991", then yes.
MECH PEOPLE. Even ignoring the 47 new maps, new enemy types, risk-reward mechanics, extended storyline, strategy complications and that cool thing where you can give the soldier you named Jimmy Two-Hearts an actual second heart, this expansion to Firaxis' near-perfect tactical gauntlet gives you the ability to take a person, and turn them into a mech. They could have included that one change, called it "XCOM: Oh My God I'm A Robot Now" and it still would have been the best thing.
Better than the original?: MECH PEOPLE. By which I mean, "yes".
This is a bit of an odd one. Two bits of Sniper Elite DLC have been added to a third chunk of new game, then released as a single game billed as three separate games. Ignore the odd approach to marketing, and you'll realise that this is Rebellion's secret weapon. In the same way that many buy CoD for its zombies mode, this takes the core gameplay of Sniper Elite and gives it a grotesque twist, becoming a game terested in surviving sieges than sneaking and sniping.
Better than the original?: Yes! Sniper Elite's always weakest when it tries to be a stealth game. This is never a stealth game, ergo it is better. Plus, one of the playable characters totally looks like the guy who gets his face melted off at the end of Raiders of the Lost Ark.
One of two standalone packs for Capcom's gleeful sequel, Case West distinguishes itself by letting the first game's protagonist, Frank West make a proper appearance. What follows is a miniature story that squeezes in all of the series' major elements, some dumb jokes and, weirdly, a better co-op mode than either the main game or Case Zero, the first pack.
Better than the original?: Not quite - Dead Rising's at its best when it feels freeform, letting you stumble on idiotic weaponry and places to use them. A smaller game doesn't quite lend itself to that, but it's a great attempt at altering the formula a tad.
You can almost taste the increasing desperation of Saint's Row's writers with every passing game. "Where the hell do we go next?" one will have said. Another, noticing the very useful emphasis I put in the text there, will have gotten the idea, and here we are. It's a fun concept - fan favourites Johnny Gat and Kinzie Kensington enter the underworld to reclaim their stolen boss, using a myriad of Mortal Sin-based weaponry to wade through a population even more evil than the Saints. Sadly, the execution was far less exciting - it's a rushed project, with all the technical and design problems that entails.
Better than the original?: Absolutely not - Gat Out of Hell's both less varied and less attractive than the game that spawned it.
This one's stretching the issue a little, but Remedy's download-only follow up to its Twin Peaks-meets-Resi oddity was so rooted in the first game's ideas that we're happy to include it, despite it taking two years to arrive. It's a more madcap experience, with a bigger emphasis on combat, but the real brilliance is in how it changed the tone - this time, it aped The Twilight Zone, taking place within a TV show you find playing throughout the original game.
Better than the original?: We'd say it came close, except for the fact that a major plot point centres around a Kasabian song, which is simply inexcusable.
People called Ground Zeroes many things: "paid demo", "prologue" or "betrayal" were just some of the terms levelled at it. In reality, it's standalone DLC released before the main game. Look at the facts. It's a shorter experience, set up as an unnecessary but illuminating prequel to the events of The Phantom Pain, but which uses almost all the same mechanics and the same engine. Trust Kojima to weird up the whole process.
Better than the original?: *shrug*. Hopefully not, though.
Tags: Torn, Hack, Dead, Evil, Sniper, When, Force, Cave, Kojima, Phantom, Xbox, Fate, Far Cry, Help, John, Lots, Blue, Elite, Sniper Elite, Truck, Hearts, Today, Reef, The Phantom, Bungie, Remember, Ground, Zeroes, Ground Zeroes, Mortal, Rockstar
From:
www.gamesradar.com
| Metal Gear Solid V: Ground Zeroes discounted on EU PSN and Steam
Added: 27.03.2015 7:22 | 47 views | 0 comments
Metal Gear Solid V: Ground Zeroes has received a temporary discount on both the European PlayStation Store (Easter Sale) and Steam (Midweek Madness Sale). Furthermore, the price of PS3 version of Metal Gear Rising Revengeance has also been slashed.
Tags: Steve, PlayStation, Gear, Rising, Metal, Metal Gear, Solid, Stone, Revengeance, Rising Revengeance, Gear Rising, European, Easter, Gear Solid, Ground, Zeroes, Ground Zeroes
From:
n4g.com
| Metal Gear Solid: Ground Zeroes is just £5.79 on PS4, so stop complaining about its length
Added: 25.03.2015 12:18 | 7 views | 0 comments
Dealspwn reports: "Metal Gear Solid: Ground Zeroes is a fantastic slice of stealth sandbox action, but it's also very short. For just £5.79 on PS4 and £3.99 on PS3, however, we can probably all stop complaining and agree that it's well worth a punt."
From:
n4g.com
| Sonic Boom's Producer Blames Focus Groups and Over-ambition for Game's Failure
Added: 19.03.2015 18:18 | 9 views | 0 comments
GamesRadar - Former Sega of America producer Stephen Frost has gone onrecord to explain why Sonic Boom: Rise of Lyric performed so poorly at review. Speaking on the Sega Nerdcast, Frost explained that the game "overextended our grasp, in some ways". He also lamented the fact that the team forgot that Sonic needs to be fast. The reason? Focus groups. Apparently the focus groups they spoke to said that Sonic was too fast and they couldn't control him any more, so they decided to slow him down. But then that meant the traditional fans weren't happy.
From:
n4g.com
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