Latest Articles (Page 3060)
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Two maps, co-op extras, plus new shots to check out.
Ubisoft's PlayStation 3 version of Splinter Cell: Double Agent will feature a pair of new maps based on new environments, a new set of co-operative challenges and a new spy character.
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Says Team 17 bigwig.
Team 17 has had no problems adapting Lemmings for PS3, but has hinted that larger, more ambitious titles may find the transition to Sony's new platform a little more difficult.
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Says Sports Interactive boss.
Sports Interactive chief Miles Jacobson believes the five-month delay in Europe has helped strengthen PlayStation 3's launch line-up.
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No Paper Mario date for Europe
Despite firm US date.
Nintendo has yet to confirm a European release date for Super Paper Mario on the Wii, a spokesperson admitted today, despite the game receiving a firm April date in the USA.
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Can't say a dickie-bird in UK.
Britain's PlayStation 3 development community is refusing to comment en masse today on the European launch details for the machine that were announced at midnight last night.
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Feature | Virtual Console: N64 Most Wanted
I remember when it was all Hyrule field around here.
The mid-nineties was an exciting time to be a gamer. It was back then that a whole new generation of game fans came into being thanks to Sony's canny engagement of the mass-market with the PlayStation, and a time when the heroes of the medium for the next ten years made their presence felt - Lara Croft, Solid Snake, the Final Fantasy series, and many others. For those who had played games for many years before, though, it was also a time when you could almost feel history being made with successive game releases, as 3D hardware finally reached the point where it could start to replace 2D as the mainstay of gaming.
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Wii straps haven't been revised again - Nintendo
Denies photos show new design.
Nintendo has denied that it has once again revised the design of the Wiimote strap, despite apparent photographic evidence to back up the claims.
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First GOD service to do so.
Metaboli will be the first games on demand (GOD) service to offer an MMO when Archlord becomes available for download in February.
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Chainsaws into top ten.
It seems it's not just us blood-thirsty westerners that enjoy the homoerotic adventures of Marcus Fenix, as Gears of War penetrates the Japanese charts at number seven this week.
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For Europe in March.
Phoenix Wright: Ace Attourney - Justice for All will be released in Europe on 16th March.
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Review | Tokobot Plus: Mysteries of the Karakuri
Super Robot Friends.
You'll have to forgive the lack of a clever introduction to this review. The original plans involved some witty observations about the disappointing lack of robot servants in my home (possibly including a domestic insight into the state of my laundry basket), a dig at the utter uselessness of Honda's stair-climbing Asimo, and a brief sighing look back at the golden age of robots we were promised by science fiction authors decades ago. The whole affair would have been capped off with a clever tongue in cheek mention of the fact that we're also still waiting for flying cars. It would have been, in other words, a satisfying if not entirely unpredictable opening paragraph which would have put you into a fine mood to read a quick review of a game with friendly robots in it.
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Ritual acquired by Mumbo Jumbo
Perhaps to CEO's surprise.
Weeks after telling our sister site GamesIndustry.biz that the developer would remain independent, Ritual Entertainment has been acquired by growing casual games specialist Mumbo Jumbo.
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Out of 4 million manufactured.
Nintendo sold 3.19 million Wii consoles by the end of 2006, it said today, announcing record profits.
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Violent ones "a perversion".
Pope Benedict XVI has described videogames that "exalt violence and portray anti-social behaviour" as "a perversion".
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Five games, out in March.
EA is readying a DS compilation of its favourite casual games for release on 26th March in Americaland.
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Review | Sam & Max Ep3: The Mole, the Mob, and the Meatball
Not necessarily in that order.
Episodic gaming might not make business sense for Mark Rein and Epic. It might not even be working out for Valve the way it had hoped, and Ritual's episodic adventure appears to have stalled too. But for Telltale Games, it appears to be working a charm.
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35 quid for a Sixaxis.
Along with the news that the PlayStation 3 is launching for definite really really certain on 23rd March, we also have a list of prices for the basic line-up of peripherals.
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PS3 launch line-up takes shape
30+ titles listed inside.
Typical. You spend a good 28 seconds trying to come up with a convincing list of launch titles and then everyone's favourite "semi official" Sony trumpet Three Speech goes and posts them anyway.
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Sony confirms 23rd March, £425 PlayStation 3
More than 30 games on day one.
Sony has officially confirmed that PlayStation 3 will launch in Europe on 23rd March and cost GBP 425 / EUR 599.
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Ubisoft slaps TBC on PS3 titles
GRAW2, Oblivion, Vegas, etc, still need dates.
Ubisoft's latest release schedule is showing all PlayStation 3 launch titles as TBC in Europe (TBC insofar as no one knows when the PS3 is actually launching in PAL territories as yet).
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PAL PS3 launch details tonight
Confirmed for midnight.
You'll have to peg your eyes open tonight, as details of the PAL PS3 launch will be released at midnight GMT.
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World in Conflict date uncertain
Still: new trailer, shots.
Vivendi has refused to give a solid release date to next-gen PC RTS World in Conflict today, saying that "internal rejigging" of development schedules means "spring" is as specific as you're going to get right now.
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Review | Armored Core 4
Mechs appeal.
It might be the first to appear on the PlayStation 3, but Armored Core 4 is actually the twelfth game in the series. The chances are, though, that you won't be too familiar with any of the previous 11 games in the Armored Core series, so here's a quick rundown: create or customise a big robot (called, appropriately enough, an Armored Core, or AC) by choosing from hundreds of body and weapon parts. Then fight other big robots, either in one-on-one arena battles or in more elaborate missions. It's a simple formula, which conceals an enormous amount of depth. But it's not a formula that, so far, has had a huge amount of commercial success outside Japan and the US.
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Review | Elite Beat Agents
Osu!
Often when it comes to assessing the cross-Pacific paddle of a treasured Japanese videogame - particularly something of a musical bent - it's a case for us of bemoaning the inevitable infusion of Western cultural icons. Like Avril Lavigne. Worse, you're forced to note that even lifeless, incomprehensible babble in another language, or happy cartoon scrawls with outsized heads and mental flapping arms, sweep you along on waves of sympathy far greater than any of those inspired by the phoned-in nonsense scraped from the reels of an LA recording booth, or squeezed from the underpaid pencil of whichever intern's borrowing the "artist" credit that morning.
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Perhaps explains the break-up.
Lumines Live's promised downloadable content packs are now available to download from Xbox Live Marketplace, but you'll need to set aside more than a few minutes to grab them.
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Codemasters says so.
Codemasters is planning to launch Colin McRae: DIRT simultaneously on PlayStation 3, Xbox 360, and PC in June, the publisher told Eurogamer this morning.
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Crush brings "unique" mechanic to PSP
"Very cool premise," says Sega.
Sega has waxed lyrical this morning over the "very cool" and "unique" aspects of its newly signed PSP oddity, Crush.
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Alec takes a near-complete build for a spin.
This is the most complicated simple game you'll play in a while. It's the cheerful fling that quickly and quietly becomes something serious, something so intense it's mentally exhausting in all the right ways. Supreme Commander is unashamedly RTS, reduced to the nuts, bolts and panels of bewildering icons that have always defined that most PC of all game genres. Its only pretension is to be really big - it doesn't have Total War's grand strategy map or Company of Heroes' merry gene-splicing of the formula, nor does it need them. It just needs to be huge, and that's where the complexity comes in. Hundreds of units, each with their own handicaps and potencies, maps that'll wear your mouse-arm out to pan entirely across, and constant battles on a good half-dozen different fronts simultaneously. The objective is only ever to kill the other guy, but when there's so much to think about at once, it ain't easy.
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Feature | Wii Virtual Console - An introduction
A low down on what to expect from retroland.
Since the launch of the Wii a month or so back, the focus has been, understandably, on the big launch releases for the system. Zelda and Wii Sports, in particular, helped make Christmas 2006 one of the most memorable in years. Friends who'd been out of touch with games for yonks were almost weeping with joy at the likes of Wii Sports Bowling, and vowing to get a Wii as soon as they came back in stock. Meanwhile, normally reluctant family members were clamouring for another round of Golf or Tennis, and what could have been a dull days watching old movies became magically transformed into hilarious and competitive multiplayer magic.
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Review | Capcom Classics Collection Reloaded
A present from the past.
Like many stalwart publishers, Capcom has been busy spilling its retro guts over as many platforms as it can manage lately. And why not? When you've amassed a back catalogue as vast and impressive as this legendary company has over the decades, it seems almost rude to keep them locked away in the vaults, or, at best, the preserve of the emulation community. Besides, emulation has come so far that we're now, finally, in the position of being able to play perfectly replicated versions of our childhood faves on handheld systems like the PSP.
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