Neo Steam: The Shattered Continent, Neo Steam Poster, Neo Steam Gameplay, Neo Steam Pet creation, Neo Steam Modes of Transportation, Neo Steam Story, Neo Steam History and Trailer
July 9, 2009 / 7343
Neo Steam: The Shattered Continent is a free, steampunk-styled MMORPG. In US it is being published by Atlus Online, which announced its acquisition of the game on February 23, 2009 via press release.
NeoSteam was designed in Korea and localized to US market by Atlus.[1] The open beta was announced on May 27,2009.[2]
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Prelude to the War-In ancient times, the races of Chrysalis enjoyed lives of luxury in a world where science and magic harmoniously coexisted. The Pom, a race whose inquisitive minds and nimble fingers gave them a natural inclination for engineering, created many useful machines. Read more …
Aquaria Trailer: Diving Into Aquaria, Game Info, Poster and Trailer
June 12, 2009 / 13358
Aquaria is a 2D sidescrolling computer game by independent game company Bit Blot. It won the Seumas McNally grand prize from the Independent Games Festival in March 2007. It was released on the 7th of December, 2007 after more than two years of development. A Mac port was released November 12, 2008, courtesy of Ambrosia Software. An updated version of the game was released on Steam on December 15, 2008; it is equivalent to the 1.1.1 patched version of the original release, but with the addition of 27 Steam Achievements. A new patch (version 1.1.2) is currently in the works.
Overview
In Aquaria, the player controls Naija, a lone underwater dweller, who is in search of her family. She explores a massive ocean world, teeming with life and filled with ancient secrets. In her journey she encounters various underwater creatures, travels from hidden caves to sunlit oases, and solves mysterious quests in underwater ruins and long forgotten cities of ancient civilizations. Read more …
PC Game Play (22 Pics)
June 5, 2009 / 26280
Pc Game warcraft Juegos PC Read more …
Gregory Horror Show: Gameplay, Poster and trailer
May 8, 2009 / 13057
Gregory Horror Show, known as Gregory Horror Show: Soul Collector in Japan, is a survival horror video game based on the computer-generated imagery (CGI) anime series of the same name.
The game was published by Capcom in Japan and Europe, but was not released in North America. Players find themselves lost in a wood and forced to seek refuge in a menacing hotel run by Gregory, a creepy anthropomorphic mouse. In order to escape the hotel, players must retrieve a soul in a jar from each of the hotel’s bizarre denizens and return them to Death.
Players must navigate the hotel, retrieving the bottled souls which the hotel guests have been carrying. Neko Zombie, a cat who has become imprisoned in his room, introduces players to the control scheme and methods of spying on guests and stealing the souls back. Spying through keyholes allows players to eavesdrop useful information from guests, as well as scout ahead before plunging into a room and coming face-to-face with guests. Read more …
Alone in the Dark: Inferno Review, Pics, [PS3] Alone In The Dark Inferno Trailers, The Good, Bad and Hints & Cheats
December 9, 2008 / 4166
* Controls significantly improved over Xbox 360 version
* Abundant opportunities for clever item use
* Dramatic moments pack a punch
* Bucks many action adventure conventions
* May encourage pyromania.
The Bad
* Some lingering control issues whether you’re on foot or behind the wheel
* Riddled with visual inconsistencies
* May encourage pyromania.
Thanks to some key improvements, Alone in the Dark: Inferno is a more playable, more satisfying version of this unique adventure.
When Alone in the Dark came out for the Xbox 360 about five months ago, its dramatic story and unique gameplay mechanics were hobbled by its pervasive technical shortcomings. For the PlayStation 3 release, the developer has made a number of improvements that make the game much less frustrating, and chief among them are the vastly improved character movement and camera controls. Though many of the graphical oddities and some control clumsiness remain, Alone in the Dark: Inferno is a much better way to experience this unique and rewarding action adventure game.
The dramatic action sequences do a great job of conveying large-scale chaos.
As the gruff, amnesiac protagonist, you make your way through a disaster-struck New York City into Central Park, where you begin to unravel the many mysteries before you. Maneuvering through the various environments is much easier now that the main character moves with a light jog instead of a lumbering plod. Though he is significantly nimbler, he is still a bit clumsy; you’ll still have to do some funky maneuvering to interact with oddly positioned objects, and you’ll have to tread carefully during the precision platforming sequences. Fortunately, even this is much easier thanks to the easily controlled 360-degree camera that replaces the restrained over-the-shoulder camera of the Xbox 360 version. Driving controls are the same, and you can still do some neat stuff such as check behind the visor for car keys or slide into the passenger seat to ransack the glove compartment. The big improvement here is the car handling. Gone are the goofy motorboat physics of the Xbox 360 version, replaced with weightier, more down-to-earth mechanics. This makes driving much easier, though the still-finicky collision detection occasionally treats small cracks like major impediments. Despite the lingering limitations, the controls in Alone in the Dark: Inferno make locomotion much easier and let you more fully enjoy your adventure. Read more …
Condemned 2: Bloodshot E3 2007 Preshow Impressions Poster, trailer and Previews
October 13, 2008 / 3391
The sequel to the brutal first-person action game looks to raise the level of violence, as well as the story.
Games don’t get much more brutal than 2005’s Condemned: Criminal Origins, a first-person action game built around the idea that you pretty much have to pummel your opponents to death using your bare hands, blunt objects, sledgehammers, and whatever else is convenient for you at the time. It made for an incredibly violent, yet also creepy, and stunning game. Well, the brutality is going to get ratcheted up even higher in Condemned 2: Bloodshot. This sequel promises to combine the shocking violence with a creepy atmosphere, and the result is a game that feels like it’s a combination of the paranormal horror game F.E.A.R. with the movie Saw, as well as a good bit of C.S.I.-style forensic work on the side.
Condemned 2 will pick up a year after the events of the first game. Once again, you’ll play as Ethan Thomas, a disgraced FBI agent who has fallen into a drunken depression after his life falls apart because of his uncontrollable rage that causes him to beat the heck out of anyone who offends him. To say that the subject matter is bleak would be understating it, but things get even stranger after Thomas meets a mysterious figure at a playground who bashes his head in with a brick. At this point, you’ll begin a descent into a creepy, paranormal world…or will you? That’s because the story in Condemned 2 looks to be anything but conventional.
The emphasis in Condemned 2 is to really open up the combat system, which Sega admits was a bit too repetitive in the original game. Now there are four layers to combat, starting with hand-to-hand. You can punch, kick, and grab opponents, twisting their heads around to snap their necks or pummel them to death. Or you can get creative and use the environmental finishing moves, which is another layer to combat. If you grab a guy from behind and slam his head into a television set or against a wall, then you can stomp on his neck to break his back. Then there are weapons, which are yet another layer. Read more …
Alone: The Horror Begins, Previews & Features, Trailer and Pics
October 9, 2008 / 693
We go bump in the night with Centerscore’s new survival horror extravaganza.
After years of neglect, the survival horror genre is suddenly receiving a lot of attention on mobile. First, we previewed Rovio Mobile’s Darkest Fear a few months ago; now, we’ve played a ways into Centerscore’s Alone: The Horror Begins, a spooky action adventure that’ll be out in time for Halloween. From what we can tell so far, this game has all the ingredients of an awesome survival horror game: large environments, lots of darkness, frightening enemies…and a flashlight.
BOO!
Unlike the slower, puzzle-oriented Darkest Fear, Alone: The Horror Begins concentrates more on the action aspect of monster disposal. After surviving a plane crash into thick woods and encountering a dying victim of roving ghosts (called “howlers”) and zombies, your nameless hero sets out in search of help. At the beginning of the game, all he has to his name are a flashlight, a cattle prod, and a busted-up cell phone, which will occasionally receive text messages from nonplayer characters. Read more …



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