rakkoon-old
Rakkoon
rakkoon-old

Maybe I'll try borrowing someone's disc for a day or two to get through the campaign, but I've never been a big fan of multiplayer games. Perhaps it's because I don't regularly play with the majority of folks on my XBL friends list, and the two or three I do regularly game with prefer co-op experiences (which I prefer

I really want this game for its single player, as the multiplayer doesn't appeal to me and the co-op sounds stupid (based on the previews). But I can't get myself to spend €50 on it just for the campaign.

What difference does it make to the developer, publisher or platform owner if you buy the game new and play it for two hours a day every day during one year, or you buy it new and play it two hours a day for two weeks then sell it to me and I play it for two hours a day for a month? I take up your spot on the servers,

If you're going to be wearing glasses anyway, why don't they bring back the ones with the built-in screens? That way the 3D should (in my mind with very limited knowledge of 3D workings) be easier to handle too as it sends the clearest, brightest images possible straight to each eye, plus it'll make the "screen" seem

I really liked Arkham Asylum, but I don't enjoy fighting games or even the hand-to-hand combat in most games, so some parts of B:AA were enough to keep me from going through the thing a second time. When I was near the end of Uncharted 2 I accidentally got into a fight I had no idea was even possible because I don't

First thing I thought: that'd be awesome with today's graphics and a good storyline to keep players coming back (possibly a memory card for profile storage). A Battlestar Galactica inspired game would be perfect for this, although I'm not 100% sure about the on-rails bit.

They could, theoretically, do something like that in a good stealth-based game where if you kill someone rather than knocking them out you get an unskippable Austin Powers like scene where the wife/husband gets the bad news and has to tell the kid(s) daddy/mommy isn't coming home. It could get tiring quickly, but it

From what I've read it's just a bunch of linear missions you and one buddy can go through, but it's not a full campaign. I was hugely disappointed about all of that, especially the one buddy thing as I have more than one friend with whom I tend to play co-op with. That's what made/makes Halo 3, Halo ODST, Halo Reach

People who are in parties show a little icon to the left of their names in the lobby (possibly on the scoreboard as well, not 100% sure), so they're somewhat easy to identify, but you're right; the others who don't speak during matches could be in private chats. Still, it makes teamwork quite challenging :)

So far I've played maybe three TDM matches using the casual option for versus, and I kind of liked them. Mostly because I quite enjoyed seeing people try the run-roll-shotgun while I chewed them up with my lancer, even though from what I'd read previously that was the best, if not fail-safe way to get easy kills.

Personally, I think this is the first game I've ever played that had me sitting in front of the TV with my mouth open at the end. I wasn't sure if I should be glad the humans won, or be sad for the lambent who (according to my info) were the original victims and just got wiped out.

I just unscrew my controller's screws, pull the thing apart, remove the buttons and clean the non-electric parts with all-purpose wet wipes.

I got back into playing RDR last week and decided to give multiplayer another go. It was terrible; 4 people per game with at least one trying to kill everyone in sight. Then I went into friendly free roam and it was pretty good. Sure, I ended up in a three man posse with a 10 year-old know-it-all and a mute on a

Perhaps you need to play with a controller instead of mouse and keyboard to get the dial? Just guessing here, as I never game on PC, but the video was captured on a PC and I believe I saw Xbox-controller buttons on the prompts.

It doesn't make sense to prevent a manual from being printed.

I found the CD and pamphlet that came with it the other day. Might've put it in a box somewhere, but then again, when I found out Alone in the Dark wouldn't install on my computer anymore I might've thrown Outlaws away too.

Oh man, as if that Cake Boss show wasn't enough, now looking at another awesome looking cake here makes me want to learn how to make cakes like that even more.

I'm tempted, but seeing how I have absolutely no money, I don't want to risk liking a demo of a (supposedly bad) game enough to want to play the entire thing.

I definitely agree there should be more non-FPS games to break a seeming monotony that's been creeping into mainstream gaming, but complaining about something that can't otherwise be done 'realistically' (how else would you display aiming while shooting?) just doesn't make sense to me, regardless if it's intended as a

Actually, he prefers Artificial Person ;)