Watch This Room Transform Into an Amazing Mario Kart 8 Nursery
Added: 20.07.2015 21:22 | 7 views | 0 comments
When some people have a baby, they buy a handful of things for a new nursery. Others--or at least one guy--go a different route and instead construct an elaborate nursery themed around , the year-and-a-half-long project features a variety of physical items throughout the room. This includes Lakitu (inside of his cloud) holding up a finish line and a mobile comprised of McDonald's Happy Meal toys. Best of all is the kart-riding Mario on the ceiling, which is designed to look like the anti-gravity version of the karts from MK8. It even has lights built into the kart itself. You can see more of the nursery in the video above and the image gallery below.
From:
www.gamespot.com
| Total War: Warhammer Karl Franz of the Empire Trailer
Added: 20.07.2015 5:00 | 33 views | 0 comments
The Protector of the Empire calls upon the combined forces of his fellow man to rise against evil in this trailer for Total War: Warhammer.
From:
www.gametrailers.com
| Total War: Warhammer Karl Franz of the Empire Trailer
Added: 17.07.2015 20:41 | 6 views | 0 comments
Meet Emperor Karl Franz, the revered leader of the Empire, as he rallies his army in a famed battle against a ravening horde of ferocious Greenskins
From:
www.gamershell.com
| Total War: Warhammer - Karl Franz In-Engine Trailer
Added: 17.07.2015 14:37 | 7 views | 0 comments
The first in-engine trailer for the next installment in the Total War franchise has arrived, and it's looking pretty tasty.
From:
feeds.ign.com
| A First Look At The Fire Emblem Creators New Strategy RPG Project
Added: 17.07.2015 10:15 | 20 views | 0 comments
Shouzo Kaga provides an update on Vestaria Saga, his upcoming strategy RPG.
From:
n4g.com
| Man goes drum crazy with Taiko no Tatsujin performance equal parts awesome and hilarious
Added: 17.07.2015 4:15 | 6 views | 0 comments
Expat and aspiring game creator James McVinnie was recently hanging out in a Tokyo arcade. But while he and his friends were trying to find out which one of them is the fastest Mario Kart driver, McVinnie found his attention being pulled from the virtual circuit to the real-life performance going on next to him.
From:
n4g.com
| Rocket League (PS4) | VGChartz Review
Added: 16.07.2015 7:15 | 5 views | 0 comments
VGChartz's Karl Koebke: "Rocket League and SARB are a testament to the fact that modern review methods are all too often lacking; that a decent game is best explored at leisure and given time to be appreciated over the long-term. Newcomers beware, though; for as fantastic as Rocket League can be, it's a tough road to tread, and the higher-than-standard price could be all for naught if you dont tough it out and eventually come to appreciate it in all its glory. Stick with it, however, and I expect you'll be flying around online chasing after that damned ball for months and years to come."
From:
n4g.com
| How Mario Kart Players Are Paying Tribute To Satoru Iwata
Added: 15.07.2015 22:01 | 14 views | 0 comments
Though the passing of Nintendo president and CEO Satoru Iwata left a hole in the hearts of many of us working in the video game industry, his legacy will live on in the games he worked on and those that he touched.
From:
www.cinemablend.com
| Four Mario Kart Clone Characters Id Like To See
Added: 15.07.2015 16:15 | 13 views | 0 comments
"While I dont doubt that they have their fans, the likes of Baby Rosalina, Metal Mario, Tanooki Mario and Pink Gold Peach are generally pretty unpopular choices for Mario Kart characters. Nonetheless, each new game gives us more clone characters, and I use the word clone literally to mean another version of the same person." - Rice Digital
Tags: Gods, Mario, Metal, Live, Pick, Food, While, Ball, Rick, Karl, Clone
From:
n4g.com
| The real problem with crime in Arkham Knight#39;s Gotham
Added: 15.07.2015 0:07 | 37 views | 0 comments
WARNING: This article contains spoilers. Pretty much all of them.
Batman is practically a gargoyle in . He spends the night in a predatory pose, his cape lashed by rain, far above the dire avenues of Gotham City. Such is life for the wrathful vigilante born in … CRIME ALLEY. Ok. so the only Gotham people who work harder than Batman are the real estate agents.
One man’s urban decay is another’s open-world activity, though, giving Batman the ideal setup for a crime-punching superhero game. There’s just one problem with Gotham’s crime in particular. Let's go over some of the major events in Arkham Knight to find out what it is:
Commissioner James Gordon is an overachiever when it comes to abduction, getting himself captured twice in Batman: Arkham Knight - once by the title villain and then by Scarecrow. Eh, you know what? Gordon seems like a nice, hard-working guy, and since the Arkham Knight is partnered with Scarecrow we can knock his capture to a count of just one, but with joint custody between two supervillains. It’s kind of sweet if you don’t think about it.
Either way, the true indignity of Gordon’s problem comes from cutting ties with loose-cannon Batman. After Gordon storms off to finally sort things out himself, he bumbles into super-villain clutches and learns the hard lesson of Arkham Knight’s plot: only Batman can save us, because we’ve probably been kidnapped.
Oh, ok, another kidnapping. Sure. Gotham’s most belligerent botanist gets kidnapped and locked up in an improvised greenhouse before Batman’s even left his starting perch. She escapes almost coincidentally once Batman arrives, proving that she is immune to Scarecrow’s toxin and to any sort of clothing a normal woman might wear, like pants.
The fact that she’s dragged off to prison immediately without anyone even putting a sweater on her is a lousy fate to suffer, though perhaps not as bad as being played by Uma Thurman.
Arkham Knight rewards Oracle’s whip-smart advisory role to Batman by having her … hmm … abducted off-screen. Barbara Gordon’s technical skills allow her to hack and retrieve any information from within Gotham’s clock tower, granting her an immaterial freedom after Joker paralyzed her Batgirl career, but the game prefers to dangle her like a squirming carrot throughout.
The Joker’s earlier attack on Barbara is depicted in grisly detail, but her return to Arkham Knight isn’t given the same treatment - instead, we see Oracle getting shot in two different ways, thrown off a building and then dumped in the GCPD where she gets to hack some drones from afar. Her return from the dead isn’t even spun as triumphantly as the other thing that gets killed and resurrected: The Batmobile. You know, the non-person car?
Let’s give it up for the firefighters of Gotham City, who are essentially running around a bubbling volcano with just a handful of ice cubes and the constant fear of being mugged by lava from a bad caldera.
Though Arkham Knight reduces them to a percentage of game completion to be extracted from various parts of the city, these grounded city saviors deserve the help, not to mention the savage descent of Batman upon their captors. I mean, yeah, they also get kidnapped in the grand scheme of things, but it’s not like they’ve had a lifetime of combat training to defend against that sort of thing.
Hang on, Catwoman gets kidnapped? The acrobatic, masterful escape artist with nine lives and ten witty retorts per minute gets kidnapped by… The Riddler? The same disheveled anti-Layton designing Mario Kart tracks from his mom’s basement? Ok, fine.
Though Catwoman dismisses the ‘damsel in distress’ label, she says it while having an exploding collar strapped to her neck - and she can’t get the numerous keys to unlock it without Batman’s help. So, nice attempt at self-referential dodging there, writers, but nope. To be fair, though, Bats and Cats fighting through The Riddler’s abandoned orphanage is one of the highlights of Arkham Knight, even if a collar makes Catwoman less cool than she should be. At least it doesn’t have a bell on it.
After the world’s greatest detective concludes that Scarecrow is manufacturing his spooky chemicals at Gotham’s big, huge, unmissable chemical manufacturing plant - it’s a whole thing - he swoops in to save the workers being forced to work late (in the service of evil).
Alright, this one makes sense, even though it’s yet another consolidated kidnapping. Nobody living or working in Gotham would willingly help produce a fear-inducing toxin. It’s dangerous, evil and - depending on which neighborhood you live in - kind of redundant.
The flashback to the imprisonment and torture of Jason Todd - the second person to become Robin under Batman’s tough-guy tutelage - gives you a big clue to the Arkham Knight’s true identity. And by “big clue” I mean full-on confirmation, because why else are we flashing back to this now?
Though the Arkham Knight persona isn’t the one who’s kidnapped, it’s his drawn-out and humiliating captivity that leads to his festering lust for revenge against Batman. Maybe that’s why Batman’s running around rescuing everyone properly, hoping to avoid a small army of Arkham Knights nipping at his cape.
Aww, man, Lucius Fox gets kidnapped? Fox stays behind in Wayne Tower, despite a city-wide evacuation notice, working late to beef up Batman’s gadgets and deliver new Batmobile upgrades. He’s charming, he’s enjoying the absurdity of designing toys for a billionaire vigilante, and he’s collected. Later, though, he’s collected at gunpoint in the office by Thomas Elliot, a Bruce Wayne doppelgänger going by the name of Hush.
Batman doesn’t tolerate kidnapping, of course, and with barely a biff or a pow he manages to negotiate Fox’s freedom.
Whoops. In negotiating Fox’s release in Wayne Tower, Batman reveals his face to Hush as a reminder that they used to be childhood friends, and that one of them grew up to be an armored weirdo who breaks arms and probably doesn’t appreciate hostage situations in his damn office.
After bludgeoning him into unconsciousness, Batman decides it’s probably best not to send Hush straight to the Gotham lockup. Instead, Hush is locked up somewhere in Wayne Tower. An unsanctioned, corporate acquisition of a person against their will and without the police’s knowledge? Suuuure sounds like a kidnapping, Mr. Wayne.
Le sigh. Batman’s initial protege, Dick Grayson, graduates from the role of Robin to pursue a career as Nightwing in a town called Blüdhaven (it sounds lovely). The pair briefly team up to foil a weapon smuggling plot by Penguin, and are then separated when Nightwing gets kidnapped off-screen.
Being bailed out by your master could be some kind of spandex-clad Karate Kid moment, but the snappy dialogue between Batman and the former boy wonder clearly just serve as a smokescreen for embarrassment. Being rescued from a waddling man with a semi-automatic umbrella is worse than having your dad come get your sorry shoplifting self from a Hot Topic backroom. Oh well, at least Robin doesn’t get kidnapped.
Well, here’s an ironic case where Batman actually helps out in the kidnapping, locking Robin 3.0 up in a futuristic cell in order to protect him. This not only leaves him in a prime spot to be collected by Scarecrow later, but acts as prelude to the future Batman who has to worry about empty nest syndrome.
To be fair, this is one of the more sensible kidnappings in the game. Batman makes a mistake for once, blinded by his fear of losing another partner in the collateral damage of all the supervillain crap he has to deal with, and has to fix it in a way that echoes Arkham Knight’s overall message: being friends with Batman is the worst. It would have been better to let Robin decide and act on this point, though, rather than being appended to a staggering list that relies far too much on one kind of peril. But that’s it, right? We’re done with kidnappings, surely.
B … Batman gets kidnapped in his own game?
Ok, that’s it, let’s wrap this list up. There’s just no rescuing it now.
Tags: Torn, Hack, Mario, Dirt, Batman, Cave, Sure, After, Ball, Though, Joker, James, Knight, Huge, Karl, Arkham, Thomas
From:
www.gamesradar.com
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