-->

Not found what you looking for?:

X-Men Origins: Wolverine Hands-On

X-Men Origins: Wolverine Hands-On
We've been anxious to get our hands on Raven Software's upcoming X-Men Origins: Wolverine game since getting the rundown on the promising game from our Australian compadres. As longtime comic-book fans, we've pretty much resigned ourselves to the fact that Wolverine would likely always be neutered in some fashion as far as games were concerned. A slightly mental Canadian killing machine with a short temper, an indestructible metal skeleton with matching claws, and the ability to heal just about any wound doesn't fit into your standard game archetype. That said, Raven seems to be finding its way with its upcoming take on the mighty mutant. We had the chance to get our hands on a few levels of the Xbox 360 version of the game and were very happy with where Raven's going with the game. ReadMore

In Case You Aren’t Sick of Music Games…

Guitar Hero 5

This upcoming title from Activision will let you play four of anything. Now, nobody has to fight over who gets to play the guitar. There won’t be any snoozing on boring bass songs, and you can annoy the sin out of everyone around you by having four people tapping rubber guitars at the same time (if you can fit that many in your living room). Hey, you can even have your own little barbershop quartet and have four people singing. Whatever you do, it’ll be represented that way on stage as you play, which is is sort of neat. Sort of.

This four-player play-whatever-you-want-however-you-want setup will be available in all game modes. A new “Rockfest” mode will allow people to compete against each other. The difficulty level will go up as you hit sequential correct notes, and drop as you miss them. Points are tallied, the highest points wins, and you are just the coolest thing on the planet. The full list of songs hasn’t been announced yet for this title, but info has been dropped that the lineup will include:

The Rolling Stones“Sympathy for the Devil”
Bob Dylan“All Along The Watchtower”
The White Stripes“Blue Orchid”
Santana“No One To Depend On (LIVE)”
Vampire Weekend“A-Punk”
Tom Petty - “Runnin Down a Dream”
Johnny Cash“Ring of Fire”
Kings of Leon“Sex on Fire”

That is an admittedly rad group. Of course, all previously downloaded music will work with Guitar Hero 5 as well.

Play Games Guitar HeroRock Band: Unplugged

No fifth button, no peripherals, no multiplayer. For this PSP title, you’ll use the directional pad to play notes, and you should game with your headphones on. If you’re into music games and use the PSP, you’ll probably try it out. If you don’t use the PSP and don’t care about music games, this isn’t going to convince you of anything. ‘Nuff said.

If you are one of those folks who is excited about Rock Band on the PSP, here is the full track list for Rock Band: Unplugged:

AFI - “Miss Murder”
All-American Rejects - “Move Along”
Audioslave - “Gasoline”
Black Tide - “Show Me the Way”
Freezepop - “Less Talk More Rock”
Jimmy Eat World - “The Middle”
The Killers - “Mr. Brightside”
Lacuna Coil - “Our Truth”
Lamb of God - “Laid to Rest”
Modest Mouse - “Float On”
Queens of the Stone Age - “3’s and 7’s”
System of a Down - “Chop Suey!”
Tenacious D - “Rock Your Socks”
3 Doors Down - “Kryptonite”
Alice in Chains - “Would?”
Blink 182 - “What’s My Age Again”
Foo Fighters - “Everlong”
Judas Priest - “Painkiller”
Lit - “My Own Worst Enemy”
Lush - “De-Luxe”
Mighty Mighty Bosstones - “Where’d You Go?”
Nine Inch Nails - “The Perfect Drug”
Nirvana - “Drain You”
The Offspring - “Come Out and Play (Keep ‘em Separated)”
Pearl Jam - “Alive”
Smashing Pumpkins - “Today”
Social Distortion - “I Was Wrong”
Soundgarden - “Spoonman”
Weezer - “Buddy Holly”
Billy Idol - “White Wedding Part 1″
Bon Jovi - “Livin’ on a Prayer”
Dead Kennedys - “Holiday in Cambodia”
Motörhead - “Ace of Spades”
The Police - “Message in a Bottle”
Siouxsie & the Banshees - “The Killing Jar”
Boston - “More Than a Feeling”
Jackson 5 - “ABC”
Jethro Tull - “Aqualung”
Kansas - “Carry on Wayward Son”
Rush - “The Trees”
The Who - “Pinball Wizard”

Logo Guitar HeroPeripherals
Buy this $200 guitar from Logitech, PS3 owners. You know you want to. It has no wires, metal pegs, a rosewood fingerboard, and costs more than my actual guitar. Go on, just sell your soul to Satan right now…

Source: ADDICTED GAMMER

Guitar Hero: Metal's biggest band ever comes home to the music franchise that started a revolution.

Release: 29 Mar 2009
ESRB rating: T (Teen)
Publisher: Not Available

The Guitar Hero franchise seems to be ever rolling, churning out more than one title a year these days. Fortunately for metal fans, this year's "side project" is Guitar Hero: Metallica, which brings with it a ton of promise and hype. After all, Metallica is the band that has convinced countless souls to pick up a guitar (myself included), and their music seems to be a perfect fit for the formula.

Luckily, the game delivers in many of the ways that we had hoped for. The track list is stellar, the presentation is top-notch, the band is very well represented, and, perhaps most surprising of all, there's a ton of stuff for fans of the band to check out. While the game isn't as immense as the franchise's yearly big update, and while it generally sticks to the same tried and true formula of past releases, there's just a feeling of care taken with the experience that makes it a must-play for fans of the band and metal in general.

The title is a full-band game, just like Guitar Hero World Tour, so guitar, bass, drums and vocals are all part of the mix. Rather than the gig-based progression from World Tour, you'll find something much closer to the original two titles where it's a tier-based system, but instead of having to beat each song in a tier to progress, you need only meet a total star requirement. I actually "finished" the game after having only beaten 40% of the songs, so there's a ton of leeway in allowing you to move on if you get stuck on something. Obviously there are incentives to go back and play everything else in the name of unlockables and so forth (including the band's instruments), not to mention fun, but it's unlikely that you'll get stuck unless you choose a difficulty that's way over your head.

Though it presents less of a challenge and winds up taking away a little of the reward for beating some of the game's hardest songs (like Slayer's "War Ensemble"), it's nice to know that you won't get caught up having to repeat the same track over and over to progress. Also, it means that you can almost skip right past the early stuff and quickly get to the big tracks, like "Master of Puppets" and "One", if you really want to.

Speaking of the tracks, as I mentioned before, the set list here is absolutely killer, not only in terms of song quality but the overall enjoyment level with respect to actually playing them as well. There's just something about the way that these guys play their stuff that translates really well to a plastic guitar (if that makes sense). Plenty of fast power cords, blistering solos, melodic breaks that don't bore you to death and just awesome riffs all around. Lars' drumming also turned out to be incredibly fun, offering up cool bass work with some thundering toms here and there.

As for the song choices, the tracks span the entirety of Metallica's career, pulling titles like "Seek and Destroy" and "Whiplash" from Kill 'em All, all the way up to "Broken Beat and Scarred" from Death Magnetic. You'll find at least a couple tracks from each of the band's first five original albums (up through the Black album), with a scattering of stuff from the latest four, which is great news for long-time fans. My only complaint in the song selection department is that "Blackened" and "…And Justice For All" don't appear here, likely because of their availability as DLC for Rock Band. Still, those seem to be the only two major tracks that I'm sad aren't here. I'm sure everyone will have their personal favorites, but the available songs read like the quintessential "Best Of" track list for the band. Killer stuff all around.

My biggest complaint for the game is actually tied to the available songs, however, and it's assuredly going to be a disappointment to many folks. The only DLC that the game supports is Death Magnetic - that's it. None of the downloadable tracks for World Tour work here, which means that you'll have to swap back to that disc to play the bulk of your library if you've invested in some new tunes. Really, downloadable content like this should be cross-franchise, and as it's not, the game feels like it's a little separated from the would-be pack.

With regards to presentation, as I had alluded to before, a lot of care was put into making sure this was a die-hard fan's game. The band members all look great, sporting more realistic (though not entirely) looks than any of the characters previously seen in the franchise, including Guitar Hero: Aerosmith. The band came in for a series of motion capture sessions, and their movements have been transferred into the game quite well. Gone are the stilted animations that we had seen in the past, instead replaced by lifelike movements from James, Lars, Kirk and Robert. Great stuff here, right down to the camera work.

But the presentation goes way beyond the way the four guys look and move. You'll find a ton of content here that'll bring you inside the band's inner-circle, including behind-the-scenes footage from the motion capture sessions, fan-shot video from tiny club gigs (the kind of stuff you'll never see in person unless you're incredibly lucky), a gallery with photos and tour notes from years past and song lyrics. Perhaps coolest of all for factoid-obsessed fans however is the inclusion of Metallifacts, VH1 Pop-up Video-inspired sets that allow you to watch the game play a song while notes and info bits pop up on the lower part of the screen. This isn't available for every song, but there's a fair bit of interesting stuff for the numerous selections that you can watch it for. All of this is great all around, and really helps to sell the fact that a lot of time went into ensuring that this isn't just a slapped-together take on World Tour with Metallica songs.

As I mentioned before, the game doesn't stray from the beaten path too much in terms of gameplay mechanics, but there are a couple cool new things related to the drums. The first is the Expert+ setting which essentially turns on every bass drum note. Usually on faster music like this the bass drum notes are scaled back so that you can actually play them with a single pedal, but Expert+ gives you the full deal so that you can attempt to mimic Lars by playing with dual bass pedals. Pre-ordering the game would have netted you a second pedal for free, but you can pick it up separately if you were holding out until now. Of special note is that, at least in the setups we tried, the Guitar Hero bass pedals don't work with Rock Band kits, so even though you can play the game with Rock Band's drums, you won't be able to couple the second bass pedal with the kit.

The other cool mode is a secret (well, not so much anymore) mode called Drum Over where you're able to turn off the required notes for a song and just play whatever you want. The drums are sampled from whatever track you're playing, so if you're using this on "Master of Puppets", the skins will sound like they do on said album. I've been told that this mode was made as a "secret" of sorts so that folks wouldn't automatically think that you would be able to submit a score to online leaderboards, though it seems to me that a quick note saying as much would have sufficed. At any rate, this is a really cool way to play the game and I'm hoping we'll see more of it in the future.

The last bit that I'll mention before I wrap things up is that you might think this would be an incredibly hard game, possibly too much to handle for your skill set, or perhaps a nice challenge from start to finish for you experts out there. That's not exactly the case. While the end does get hard, and you will need some endurance to finish some of the faster and longer tracks ("Master of Puppets" is a great example), I actually didn't have any sort of a problem until I started playing the final tracks. I'm fairly good at the game and always play on Expert, though I'm not the sort that's ever been able to come close to beating "Through the Fire and Flames" from Guitar Hero III. At any rate, the game's difficulty ramps up in a nice fashion, so don't worry about getting left in the cold early on. Newcomers will have a harder time here than with other Guitar Hero titles as there aren't any really simple tracks (like the usual Joan Jett inclusions), but it's far from impossible.

Closing Comments
Guitar Hero: Metallica is a great music game, one that has a track list that almost seems like it was written expressly for the purpose of this title. A lot of care was put into the production to ensure that it is both true to the band and its music, while also offering fans cool insight into the group's on-goings. It certainly doesn't reinvent the wheel, but it's been a while since I've had this much fun with a music game. The only thing keeping me from scoring it higher is the fact that it doesn't support most of the Guitar Hero DLC. Other than that, it's a great experience that Metallica fans should run out and get.

Guitar Hero: Metallica: ScreenshotsGuitar Hero: Metallica: ScreenshotsGuitar Hero: Metallica: ScreenshotsGuitar Hero: Metallica: ScreenshotsGuitar Hero: Metallica: ScreenshotsGuitar Hero: Metallica: ScreenshotsGuitar Hero: Metallica: ScreenshotsGuitar Hero: Metallica: ScreenshotsGuitar Hero: Metallica: ScreenshotsGuitar Hero: Metallica: ScreenshotsGuitar Hero: Metallica: ScreenshotsGuitar Hero: Metallica: ScreenshotsGuitar Hero: Metallica: ScreenshotsGuitar Hero: Metallica: ScreenshotsGuitar Hero: Metallica: ScreenshotsGuitar Hero: Metallica: ScreenshotsGuitar Hero: Metallica: ScreenshotsGuitar Hero: Metallica: Screenshots
IGN.com

Check out Virtua Tennis 2009’s mini games - old and new

Mini games have always been one of the most enjoyable aspects to the home versions of the Virtua Tennis franchise, so naturally they are making an appearance in Virtua Tennis 2009.

Sega has released a couple of videos showcasing some of the new mini games coming to the title, plus some of the old classics, revamped for the 2009 outing.

Check out both videos after the break.

Enjoy!

(VT 2009 Returning Mini Games and VT 2009 Brand New Mini Games)

Bruce Springsteen arriva su Guitar Hero

E così anche Bruce Springsteen, famosissimo artista americano, arriva su Guitar Hero. L’annuncio del debutto del cantautore americano nel mondo dei rhythm game è arrivato con un comunicato stampa del publisher Activision che ha parlato dell’uscita di due tracce scaricabili per Guitar Hero World Tour, il prossimo 27 gennaio e in contemporanea con l’arrivo nei negozi di “Working on a Dream”, cioè del prossimo lavoro in studio del rocker americano.

Uno dei due brani è la storica “Born to Run” mentre il secondo è “My Lucky Day”, presente all’interno del nuovo disco. Entrambe le canzoni saranno gratuite per una settimana a partire dal giorno di uscita mentre dal 5 febbraio il “track pack” costerà 320 Punti Microsoft per la versione Xbox 360 e 3,99 dollari per quella PlayStation 3 mentre le due canzoni saranno vendute singolarmente su Wii a 200 Wii Points ciascuna.
Blog Widget by LinkWithin

Guest Book

Welcome friends who came to favor this page. This page is a place to say prayers or just want to greet among colleagues who are benefit from this page. Should have been if we as humans have politely if the person enters the house, as well as page-Ring Gamez this space as our guests, we will be very happy if what we suguhkan guests to make the guests happy. We wait for suggestions and criticisms which build from his friends.
Game Blogs - BlogCatalog Blog Directory Review Video Game Info at Blogging Fusion Blog Directory Blog Directory Perfect World Private Servers (Games) - TOP.ORG Counter Powered by  RedCounter

Followers