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News with tag Victory  RSS

From: www.gamesradar.com

Reverse Crawl Allows You To Be The Dungeon Next Week

Added: 17.09.2015 0:17 | 75 views | 0 comments


Victory Point: "Malaysian developer Nerdook looks to put a new twist on a familiar genre when they release their latest title next week. Called Reverse Crawl, the title looks to change dungeon crawlers forever as it allows players to control the dungeon."

From: n4g.com

J-STARS Victory VS +

Added: 11.09.2015 20:21 | 99 views | 0 comments


Game Cheats: Item Shop Upgrades: When you complete the following tasks you will unlock the corresponding upgrades...

From: megagames.com

Price drop: $5.00 off J-Stars Victory VS+ PS4 Game, now only $62.99

Added: 09.09.2015 17:20 | 34 views | 0 comments


Save $5.00 on J-Stars Victory VS+ PS4 Game! The price of J-Stars Victory VS+ PS4 Game has been dropped by $5.00, order now from ozgameshop.com with free delivery to Australia and New Zealand.

From: feedproxy.google.com

Employing all the maids in Tanto Cuore

Added: 09.09.2015 6:17 | 83 views | 0 comments


Michibiku's Jenni Lada writes, "Instead, Im going to focus on how much fun Tanto Cuore is. If you can look past such trappings, it is a great deck building game. Your goal is to be the player with the most Victory Points. You get these by earning enough Employment and Love Points each turn to send maids to your Chamber and hire new ones."

From: n4g.com

Video Game Weekly Deals 09/02 Update from Amazon others (US)

Added: 02.09.2015 10:18 | 86 views | 0 comments


September is here, and for some of you this means going back to school, or to work. But you might be able to squeeze in some gaming time before that! This week, Blazblue continuum shift Extend is $11.44 on PS3, JStars Victory Vs+ is $44.5 on PS4, and Code Name: S.T.E.A.M. is $22.89 on 3DS. Steam have 33% off the Elder Scrolls Online (Tamriel Unlimited). The Humble Bundle have a Tom Clancy bundle on past and future hits such as Rainbow 6, Splinter Cell, And Rainbow 6 Siege. (Aah, fond memories of playing Rainbow 6 at LAN parties in high school. They were those events where you had to be physically in the same room as the people you were playing with. Gross!) You'll also have to preorder a collector's edition of your favorite upcoming game in order to survive the end of the Summer: newly listed are Deus Ex Mankind Divided Collector's Edition ($139), Street Fighter V Collector's Edition ($99), and Uncharted 4 Collector's Edition ($119.99) as well as the Special Edition ($79.99)....

From: n4g.com

Homefront: The Revolution Dev: You Can Essentially Call This A Reboot - Victory Point

Added: 01.09.2015 23:17 | 94 views | 0 comments


During our Pax Prime demo with Homefront: The Revolution, Deep Silver talked to us about the transition from Crytek to Deep Silver and what has changed since its original E3 Demo. During our interview with C.J Kershner, senior narrative designer, he revealed that the upcoming installment doesnt follow the events in the titles debut in order to make the best entry for newcomers.

From: n4g.com

Trophy data exposes fighting games#39; motivation problem

Added: 29.08.2015 0:00 | 97 views | 0 comments


Last generation saw a lot of excellent fighting games, from the genre-revitalizing Street Fighter 4 to the bone-crushing brutality of Mortal Kombat. But as the dust settles on those bygone bouts - and developers flock to current-generation hardware - I thought it was as good a time as any to look back and see what we can learn from the past 10 years of fighting.

I've pinpointed a few trends from the limited data we have available. This is by no means a scientifically sound analysis. All I've done is collect trophy completion data from the PS4 for 10 last-generation fighting games - , it should offer a glimpse into what could - and should - define the next generation of fighting games.

In a genre about eccentric characters coming together and punching each other, you'd think a coherent story would be the least of our concerns. And yet, narrative-based trophies have some of the . In Mortal Kombat, 40 percent of players made it halfway through the campaign. In Soulcalibur 5 and Dead or Alive 5, roughly 70 percent initiated story mode. And even in games without story mode - such as Tekken Tag Tournament 2 and Marvel vs. Capcom 3 - over half cleared arcade mode and saw an ending.

I've seen plenty of fourmgoers decry narrative-based modes as a waste of resources. But the data shows that these modes clearly resonate with the greater fighting game audience. I believe players - especially those don't play at a tournament level - appreciate the sense of progression and accomplishment that story modes (or arcade endings) provide. Fighting games take a lot of time and practice to reach proficiency, which can fly by if you have plenty of local, skilled competition. But for the rest of us, seeing how a story unfolds can be the carrot-on-a-stick needed to stay invested in learning our prefered characters.

Playing another human over the internet is for most fighting game players. In King of Fighters 13, only 21 percent of people bothered to play a ranked or player match. MvC3 didn't fare much better, with 38 percent of people participating in ANY online mode. Meanwhile, Street Fighter 4 lists only 17 percent of people as having won a single ranked match. If playing online against others is the end game of any fighter, this trend needs to change.

There are several reasons why someone wouldn't play online: a poor connection, an abundance of local competition, or a genuine lack of interest. However, I believe the biggest detractor is intimidation. Dueling another person is a very emotionally intense experience, because whether you win or lose, you have no one to blame but yourself. Victory and defeat are not shared among teammates; they fall on your shoulders alone. And fighting games traditionally do a very poor job of preparing players for online play, which leads me to my next point...

many people will start a tutorial, only to abandon it. In both Street Fighter X Tekken and TTT2, around 40 percent of players started the tutorial - but only around 13 percent finished it. Mortal Kombat and KOF13 show similar completion statistics, with 17 and 15 percent respectively. Honestly, this doesn't surprise me one bit, as most fighting game tutorials have the creativity and teaching method of an Algebra textbook. Between the cluttered checklists and clinical presentation, they feel like homework.

James Chen, long-time fighting game commentator and enthusiast, for the way it handles its tutorial modes: they're disguised as mini-games. Break the Targets is an exercise in learning your character's moveset, Home Run Contest is about dealing as much damage as possible in a short amount of time, and so on. Part of getting people engaged in a fighting game is arming them with the skills necessary for success. There's a need here that's not currently being met - at least, not in a way that makes new players follow through on their efforts to improve.

What all this data says to me is that fighting games have a motivation problem. I imagine most people reading this article understand that, when you're proficient at a particular fighting game and have the chance to face someone of similar skill, it's a rush like no other. But reaching that point takes a lot of honest-to-goodness work. Unless you already know that your investment is going to have some concrete payoff - be it satisfaction or bragging rights - there's little reason to make such a commitment. You're simply not motivated.

Fighting games in the current generation need to do a better job of using what they have to incentivize their audience. One simple way to lure players in is with more costumes, stages, gems, additional fighters, backstory, and other extras to unlock within the game itself rather than locking them behind a bunch of intrusive microtransactions. It means using the story mode to guide players from their first fireball to defeating the hardest-level AI in a way that feels natural.

A while back, I ran a story about the system coming to Killer Instinct. In brief, the Shadow Brain is an AI you spar against and send out into the internet to do battle in your name. Meanwhile, you can fight against other player's custom-made AIs. This is a really smart way to help acclimate players to the online arena. It creates a bridge between the tough-but-exploitable challenge of a traditional CPU opponent and the instinctual quirks of an actual person.

With any luck, Shadow Brain will be just the first in a long line of innovations that'll encourage players to get more out of their fighting games. This genre offers some of the most intense and gratifying experiences in all of gaming; it just needs to make you want it.

J-Stars Victory Vs+ Review A Middling Fighter Lacking Depth or Substance | COG

Added: 22.08.2015 7:20 | 32 views | 0 comments


COG writes: J-Stars Victory Vs+ is a fighter where you can play with your favorite manga/anime characters. If you are looking for some chewing gum for your brain, you have come to the right place.

From: n4g.com


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