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News with tag Second  RSS

From: www.gamesradar.com

Second Life Viewer 3.7.28.300924

Added: 13.05.2015 20:04 | 9 views | 0 comments


This is an official viewer for the game Second Life

Tags: Live, Second
From: spd.rss.ac

Rocket League Blasts Into Second Closed Beta on Playstation 4

Added: 13.05.2015 18:17 | 17 views | 0 comments


Psyonix the globally-renowned independent developer and publisher of Rocket League announced today that its second round closed beta for the PlayStation®4 will begin. After the huge success of the first round with a hundred thousand games played, half a million goals scored, and nearly 1 million miles driven. Psyonix will release another batch of limited multiplayer Beta vouchers for consumers in both Europe and North America on a first-come, first-serve basis (Beta keys from the first test will still be accepted; no need to sign up for a new key).

From: n4g.com

Singularity Viewer 1.8.6 Build 6508

Added: 13.05.2015 15:35 | 9 views | 0 comments


Try a new viewer for the Second Life and OpenSim games

Tags: Live, Second, Build
From: spd.rss.ac

Combat Arms: Line of Sight Second Closed Beta Underway

Added: 13.05.2015 8:20 | 14 views | 0 comments


More features and more firepower

From: www.gamershell.com

King#039;s Quest Second BTS Video

Added: 11.05.2015 19:17 | 9 views | 0 comments


#039;Voicing a Modern Classic#039; is the second installment in a four-part series revealing the headlining talent at the heart of bringing King#039;s Quest to life

Tags: Quest, Second
From: www.gamershell.com

These inFAMOUS: Second Son Art Sets Are a Must-Have For Die Hard Fans

Added: 09.05.2015 22:17 | 5 views | 0 comments


Some sweet art for die hard fans of inFamous: Second Son.

From: n4g.com

Space Ape Games Unveils Second Title: Rival Kingdoms: Age of Ruin

Added: 09.05.2015 7:17 | 20 views | 0 comments


Space Ape Games, the developer behind successful mobile title Samurai Siege, today released its second game, Rival Kingdoms: Age of Ruin - globally on iOS. Space Apes first release, Samurai Siege, was a worldwide success, achieving over $20m in aggregate revenue and over 10 million downloads in just over a year. For their second game, Space Ape Games has built on Samurai Sieges strategy gaming roots, to deliver a deep gaming experience set in an immersive fantasy world created with the help of award-winning games writer Rhianna Pratchett. Rival Kingdoms is a bold new take on the mobile real-time strategy (RTS) genre with a heavy emphasis on explosive action, intense multiplayer combat and collaborative guild-based gameplay. Players build fortified camps, armies and alliances in the war-torn land of Estara, and fight each other and the world-threatening Ruin. Along the way, they can discover and recruit a variety of Ancients powerful allies whose special attacks can dev...

From: n4g.com

The best gaming graffiti since Jet Set Radio

Added: 08.05.2015 21:00 | 30 views | 0 comments


This year marks the 15th birthday of Jet Set/Grind Radio, a game about Olympic-grade rollerbladers who bear their eccentric souls through colorful street art (when they aren't busy grinding across skyscrapers). One of the first titles to incorporate graffiti as a game mechanic, Jet Set's a decade and a half later, when using graffiti as nothing more than a post-apocalyptic flavor enhancer has become a tired trend.

But it's not all bad. While some games have morphed in-game graffiti into little more than a forgettable storytelling shortcut, others have put the power of aerosol to good use. Whether it's giving you tips through crimson-colored etchings or letting you leave your still-wet mark on the game world, these titles show gaming graffiti's true potential. Read on, and see what games have done grandaddy Jet Set proud.

We can't all be Banksy. For every fine artist that graces the mean streets with their aerosol masterpieces, there's 1000 taggers who focus on ten-second spray jobs that are either incomprehensible or pretty damn dull. Most games don't tend to showcase that part of graffiti culture, preferring their nameless citizens to be articulate and ominous in their frantic wall-scribbling. The Last of Us, however, makes a point of including some more everyday graffiti, from messy tagging to deliberate notes that get their message across in the most functional way possible.

While some games create graffiti that tries so hard to be unnerving or atmospheric that it quickly grows stale, mixing it up is a great way to keep the player immersed. By incorporating a mix of tagging, direct messaging, and the more cryptic writings games like to go for, The Last of Us' world feels a lot more real. Plus, it's nice to get a warning about the guy who'll shoot you if you want into his house. Thanks for the heads-up!

Most 'graffiti' written in blood is hard to take seriously. That's especially the case when the message is vague and enigmatic, because you'd think when you're dying of massive blood loss you'd get to the point a lot faster. This once unique shortcut to creepy has been trod so often it's basically a five-lane highway, and now blood-based messaging almost always looks cheap. Almost, because Dead Space gets a special exemption. The first time you see CUT OFF THEIR LIMBS fingerpainted across the wall, it actually looks incredibly disturbing and gives you critical information.

Given that Isaac just witnessed his comrades being brutally murdered by an unknown monster and almost got chewed on himself, you were probably pretty freaked out when you first stumble upon this helpful and sticky message. It plays well into the atmosphere the game is building, and it's such practical advice for how to deal with necromorphs that it doesn't seem out of place. The UI kind of ruins the moment by immediately explaining what them note means, but don't blame the graffiti for that.

While Dishonored does commit some of the standard game-graffiti sins ("Rats are eating our babies" was scary the first time, but less so the ten times after that…), it's not all the same vague declarations of misery that make every post-apocalyptic reality look exactly alike. In addition to giving you information about Dunwall that's more specific than 'here be generic unrest', it's also tailored to Corvo and what in particular would catch his eye.

Specifically, the street art of Dunwall does its greatest service to the Empress, who appears in stenciled form frequently throughout the city where you least expect to find her. Given that she's the North on Corvo's moral compass, the fact that images of her are everywhere makes it feel like you're being carefully watched, and gets you wondering (usually uncomfortably) if you're doing the right thing.

Most games stick exclusively to graffiti as a controlled, atmospheric component, which is kind of ironic when you think about it. Infamous apparently decided it's had enough of the man's version of graffiti, and decided to put the spray can in your hands. Through a series of mini-games that require you to turn your controller on its side and shake it around (and you'll do it regardless of looking dumb because it's fun as heck), you choose between various 'good' and 'bad' stencil designs that you can paint across Seattle. You'll also get good or evil karma depending on if you paint something uniting or inflaming, so maybe stick to giant rubber ducks if you want to stay benevolent.

Second Son isn't the first game to make graffiti an interactive experience, but it adds an extra layer of player agency by letting you choose what kind of tone you want to give the work and how you want it to affect the world. Do you promote unity and peace, or rebellion? That's up to you, but whatever you choose, it's gonna look sick.

In the Aperture Science Labs, where everything at first seems so purposefully and perfectly arranged, it's the small inconsistencies that make you realize something's amiss. Like, say, a wall panel that's propped open a little too far. Get close enough to crawl inside, and the wall of manic scribbling that greets you removes any misguided feelings of safety you might have had.

While it might seem passé now that THE CAKE IS A LIE memes have driven us all up the wall, Portal's graffiti is cleverly designed to make sure you feel truly unsafe in Aperture while still making basically zero sense. Not only is some person hiding in the walls so he can write this stuff, but turning familiar imagery into something sinister (like a security cameras with the words SHE'S WATCHING YOU scribbled next to it in bright red) while not giving you anything concrete immediately sets you on edge. Good thing too, since that sets you up for a close call later.

Silent Hill knows that less is more, especially when it comes to street visibility and safe places to hide. The series is known for using a visual or trick only once, making the most of the one moment when it would be scary and then not falling back on it again. But enough about that one damn bathroom jump scare (*shivers*), because Silent Hill 2 does something similar with graffiti. There are only two notable pieces in the whole game, but they're used to such chilling effect that I remember them to this day. And not by choice.

The two pieces are drastically different - one is nonchalant gibberish about a missing hole in the wall, while the other is a direct threat to the state of James' semi-rotten soul - but they work together to scare the health drink right out of you. The nonsensical but eerie nature of the first primes you for fight, and, so you're even more shaken when you see the note telling James to kill himself. In one splashing of gorey street vandalism the game puts you on edge, tells you that someone wants you dead, and leaves you wondering why James and his late wife Mary wouldn't show up in the same place afterward. And isn't that a doozy of a question.

Few games like to take the 'metro station bathroom stall' route with their graffiti, but sometimes that's just the most natural, embarrassingly human way to go. The safehouses in Left 4 Dead are littered with graffiti from survivors who've gone before, with messages varying from poetic notes to helpful information to mocking the guy who wrote the poem because oh wow, that was terrible. Special ridicule is reserved for the kind of eerie messages common to other games, and you can expect a note like "We are the real monsters" to be annotated with "You are the real moron" in response.

In addition to being realistic - you know you've seen some bit of graffitied wisdom with PS I'm fat scribbled below it - it also does the exactly opposite of most game wall writing by making the world feel less empty. While you only have your wits and your three friends of varying combat skill to save you from the oncoming horde, seeing that other people have made it to the safehouses and brought their juvenile humor with them creates a weird sense of hope. Maybe misplaced, but let's try to be optimistic.

Combat Arms: Line of Sight Second Closed Beta Underway, Screens Unveiled

Added: 08.05.2015 9:28 | 13 views | 0 comments


More features and more firepower

From: www.gamershell.com


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