Xbox.com Games News

Tuesday, June 5, 2007

Gears of War - Hidden Fronts Map Pack

Hidden Fronts Multiplayer Map Pack:
New Maps available May 3rd

Gears of War® releases four new action-packed multiplayer maps on Thursday, May 3. The new downloadable content set is titled “Hidden Fronts” Multiplayer Map Pack.

The map pack features four new exciting multi-player maps for Xbox live: Bullet Marsh, Garden, Process, and Subway.

Bullet Marsh
The action takes place in a Kryll-infested swamp. Life saving lights are powered by an aging generator. The generator is destructable from stray bullets which would leave all combatants vulnerable to the ravenous Kryll.

Garden
An ancient conservatory, though in ruins and overgrown by vegitation, still has a functioning pesticide system. This system is deadly to anyone who enters without first purging the air within of toxins.

Process
Teams struggle for control of this underground Imulsion processing plant, which is active in spite of the end of the Pendulum wars.

Subway
A long deserted Subway station is infested with Locust.

The “Hidden Fronts” Multiplayer Map Pack will explode onto Xbox LIVE® Marketplace on May 3 for 800 Microsoft Points. All four of the new maps will be made available at no cost over Xbox LIVE on Sept. 3, 2007.
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Monday, June 4, 2007

Gears of War: Destroyed Beauty

Gears of War (usually shortened Gears or GoW) is a tactical third-person shooter video game developed by Epic Games (the creators of the Unreal Tournament series) using Unreal Engine 3.0 technology and published by Microsoft Game Studios. Released for the Xbox 360 on November 7, 2006 in select stores in the United States, it was broadly released in major U.S. retailers on November 12, 2006. The game was released on November 17, 2006 in Europe outside of Germany, where Microsoft Game Studios did not publish the game after it was denied a rating. A limited collector's edition was also released, which included a disc of bonus content and an art book titled "Destroyed Beauty" that detailed much of the game's back-story.

Gears of War centers on the soldiers of Delta Squad as they fight to save the human inhabitants of the fictional planet Sera from a relentless subterranean enemy known as The Locust Horde. The player assumes the role of Marcus Fenix, a former prisoner and war-hardened soldier. In cooperative play, the second player plays as Fenix's friend and fellow soldier Dominic Santiago, or "Dom." The two soldiers join Delta Squad, and battle the Locust Horde through the course of the campaign.Gears of War takes place on a planet known as Sera, inhabited by the human survivors of a once-glorious civilization. For a century, however, they fought among themselves. Eventually they knew the hush of peace that blanketed the land. That was until the discovery of Imulsion, a phosphorescing, low-viscosity fluid. Discovered by an oil-exploration drill, it was unusable until a woman named Dr. Helen Cooper created the Lightmass Process, which enabled production of cheap energy. The world economy soon collapsed due to its extremely low price and the elimination for the need of hydrocarbon and nuclear fuel sources. The few countries that had an overabundance of Imulsion under their feet soon found themselves at war with nations who were not as lucky, and so began the Pendulum Wars. During the 79-year war, the Coalition of Ordered Governments, or COG, became a legitimate minor political party. Founded long before the Pendulum Wars by fanatical socialist Alexiy Desipich, the party operated according to an obscure world-government philosophy based on eight guiding principle values: Order, Diligence, Purity, Labor, Honor, Loyalty, Faith, and Humility.

Gears of War focuses primarily on the character Marcus Fenix and the Delta Squad and their encounters with the Locust Horde. Delta Squad's members fluctuate throughout the first act, consisting first of Min Young Kim, Carmine, Marcus Fenix and his best friend Dominic Santiago, but during the last four acts of the game, Delta Squad consists of Marcus, Dominic, Augustus "Cole Train" Cole, and Damon Baird. Players take control of Marcus Fenix, freshly rescued by Dominic Santiago from the Jacinto Maximum Security Penitentiary. All of the squad members are available for play during multiplayer games, along with Victor Hoffman.

Gameplay

Gears of War is a third-person "over-the-shoulder" shooter. In an interview with Cliff Bleszinski, lead developer for Epic Games, he cites three games that were the primary influences in the game's design including the third person perspective from Resident Evil 4 and the tactical-cover system from kill.switch. These design choices reflect themself in the gameplay, as Gears of War focuses mainly on sound team-based and cover-dependent tactics with limited weapons rather than brute force.

Epic Games placed emphasis on the importance of cover, and on the harder difficulty levels where being exposed to enemy fire for only a few seconds can result in death. While behind cover, players can choose to aim carefully with their weapons or use blind-fire to avoid subsequent damage from showing their heads from behind cover. Players have a wide assortment of rolling and cover maneuvers at their disposal with the press of a single button. During a roadie run, the camera lowers towards the ground and bobs considerably, as if the camera were being held by another person running behind the player.

Multiplayer

Gears of War supports both split-screen, regular multiplayer over Xbox Live and System Link. There are two multiplayer modes in Gears of War, Cooperative and Versus mode. Multiplayer also adds the "downed" state, which works similar to down comrades the player must help in the single-player missions. When a player has taken too much damage from enemy, their character becomes incapacitated instead of dying instantly. The player remains in this state until they bleed out and die, or are revived by their teammates. In Execution, a player can revive without the need for other players, however player can only be revived twice, and on the 3rd down they are dead instantly. However, in cases where the damage is severe as to cause mutilation or disintegration of the body (including chainsaw attacks, short range shotgun blasts, boomshot hits, sniper headshots, or grenade explosions), the player is killed instantly.
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Wednesday, May 30, 2007

New Feature Alert

Stay Tuned. We will soon be adding a page called "Free Game Arcade" featuring . . you guessed it! A selection of free games which in futher updates you will be able to vote on, a sort of survival island of free video games if you will. The cream will rise and the rest will fall and you will have final say with your votes. ...read more!

The Changing Face of Video Games

Ever since I once I young kid, I've loved playing video games. There is no better entertainment in the world to me than video games. I find it fascinating being able to interact with the environments and do things myself rather than just watching a movie or television show in which you can't control.

Video games bring out the kid in all of us. Even timid people may find themselves yelling at the screen and pouncing on the floor in front of large audience or via internet play. I find video games to be great for social activities also. Nothing will cause a tough jock and a scrawny nerd to socialize more than a video game.Video games are huge and they're becoming more mainstream everyday. It would be difficult to find a male kid in school who doesn't own some kind of video game console. Even female video gamers are increasing rapidly. Nintendo released a handheld called, "Nintendo DS" which features some games more directed to the female and non-gamer audience. These games include titles such as "Nintendogs", "Brain Training", and "Super Princess Peach".

The future of video games maybe rather interesting. Graphics keep improving and look more realistic than ever. XBox 360 and Playstation 3 have graphics better than most computers in houses. They say the future of gaming within the next 5 years is HD and crystal clear graphics. Nintendo Wii is taking a rather different approach. They say the future is a new, free movement hand controller. It will change the way people play games and make them look more fun. Nintendo hopes developers can come up with innovative ideas that make people think outside the box. They believe a wide range of people with purchace the console including the elderly, females, and non-gamers.
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Tuesday, May 29, 2007

Video Games, Bringin' It Home

Video games are one of the best forms of entertainment today. With it, you can really make your imagination come alive and become an entirely different character that fights monsters from different planets or be a Formula 1 race car driver.

To play these games, you usually go to the mall and play it on the arcade. In the arcade, you will see different games available. Some are even placed on realistic cars or fighter planes that are designed to follow every move you make. For example, if you play in a fighter plane, you will see that the machine will follow the plane’s movements, when you bank your plane right, you will feel the machine that you’re in move right too, if you pull up, you will feel that the machine will also point up.

Some of the arcade games even have a vibration feedback to alert you that you’re being hit by the enemy. There are even two player modes where you can go head to head with your friends in a dog fight or you can do cooperative missions where your friend can be your wingman. There are a lot more arcade games available.

However, you can’t go to the arcade everyday because doing so can be too expensive. Therefore, you should buy your own video gaming console where you can play right in your own home. Although it won’t contain all the realistic machines that you can find in the arcade, you can still have that great graphics and sound quality in the games.

Another great thing about buying your own gaming console is that you can have flexibility in selecting your games. There are a wide variety of games available that is not yet available or impossible to put in arcades.

In order to maximize enjoyment when you buy a video gaming system, you want to get the best. However, you may wonder what makes a good gaming console. With the number of gaming consoles available in the market today, people get confused on which gaming console they should purchase. The competition makes gaming console manufacturers develop the latest graphics and sound technology and integrate them in their systems making all the different kinds of gaming consoles in the market really stand out.

In the past, crude graphics and simple sounds were the ones available in the market. And, it was really popular. Today, quite a few gaming console manufacturers are now manufacturing the latest gaming consoles with integrated features that can even rival the power of your home personal computer.

Sega, Nintendo, Microsoft and Sony are four of the big names in the gaming console industry. They create the best gaming consoles in the market and really took the world by storm with each new version released. When you play in these consoles, you will know that it can really give quality entertainment for you and your family. When you have the time, you will spend hours on playing an action packed game with amazing realism and sound quality.

To answer the question on what makes a gaming system the best is not just about the sound quality and the graphics technology integrated on the system. Before you buy a gaming console, make sure that the gaming console has a lot of game titles supported. Besides, people would rather choose a gaming console where thousands of different games are available rather than purchasing a gaming console that only supports a few hundred games. You would eventually grow tired or bored of the only few hundred games available in a particular gaming console.

With thousands of gaming titles you can choose from, you can simply buy another game title if you get bored with your other games.

Another thing you should look for in a gaming console today is if it has additional add-on gadgets that you can connect. Some gaming consoles have memory cards that you can buy for you to save your progress in case you want to continue playing later on. Some have different joysticks that you can plug in for a more realistic feel for the game. For example, if you want your racing game feel more realistic, you can purchase a steering wheel with gas and brake pedals and if you want your fighter plane simulator, you can purchase a joystick that looks similar to fighter plane controls.

There are even gaming consoles that are integrated with a modem. This gaming console can give you the capability to connect to the internet and play with other players across the world.

If you choose a video gaming system that has all these features, you purchased the best video game system available. With the continuing development of different gaming consoles, who knows what other features it may bring.

About The Author
Harvey Perl

IF YOU WOULD LIKE TO GET MORE FREE INFORMATION ON VIDEO GAMES VISIT MY WEBSITE AT HTTP://WWW.PERLISGOLD.BIZ. THANKS.
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Monday, May 21, 2007

Rainbow Six: Vegas; Thumbs up!!

Rainbow Six Vegas for the xbox 360. Another Ubisoft release of a Tom Clancy title.

Once again the Unreal 3 engine pays dividends as, like Gears of war, Rainbow Six Vegas is beautiful. Smooth graphics, seamless frame rate and a wide variety of localities and lighting. This really is a top tier video game graphically speaking, although if I had any complaint it would be the thermal vision. rather like Splinter cell: Double agent. It's simply a dark purple kind of color with yellows representing heat. I preferred the wider color range personally.

Obviously a video games most important feature is the gameplay, despite what a good lot of fan boyish rantings on this sites message board might imply. At the end of the day, Vegas just plays well. No, it isn't incredibly tactical like the first in the series, so there isn't going to be four hours of planning before each mission, but it's still tactical enough to distinguish itself from the run and gun likes of Halo and other such bouncy FPSs. The first thing that might strike youwhen playing is the fact that you die quite quickly, and there is almost no room for even small mistakes.

The games cover system, much like that of the coveted Gears of War should help to keep you out of trouble in most instances where you would otherwise have your brains splattered across the pavement, however. Also the open maps, which give you the option to take multiple paths, will save you from throwing down your controller after dying a few times trying to tackle an enemy mounted machine gun. Flanking will be your best friend throughout the games single and multiplayer.

But the comparison with Gears of War really ends there, as the game tends to me more about moving about the mission very carefully than sticking yourself to cover only to pop up and shoot 100 bullets into the face of a gung ho enemy. The first reason why you won't be doing that is because the enemy A.I is quite intelligent and will take cover often, rather than run at you and your two squaddies with little regard for their own being.

The squad system is well thought out, allowing you to dish out a move to command with a simple press of the A button, and event specific orders such as moving to a door in preparation of a room clearing means you have a good amount of control over your squad mates. Also their A.I isn't too shoddy either and many times they might even save your behind if you find yourself in an explosive situation.

The online portion of the game, which features a create-a-character mode as well as rank progression, is quite enjoyable, although I would have to point out the occasion freezing that occurs (even if infrequently or not at all for most) can be quite irritating. You gain experience for each match you play which contributes to your rank. Ranking up gives you access to more weapons and equipment which is a nice feature, although the weapons you start off with are powerful enough to cause destruction if used wisely. There are a variety of game modes which will please many. Team Survival reminds me a lot of CounterStrike, and occasionally can cause the same frustration where you carefully move about the map with guile only to be shot in the back by a flanking opponent. Overall the gameplay is very solid and enjoyable, and even though the tactical aspect has been dumbed down from the first game in the series, it still retains enough tactical nuance to keep the series' trademark.

The sound consists of gunfire, ambient slot machines, profanity-laced terrorist chatter, and epic tunes. Guns sound like they should and even sound unique when equipped with a silencer. The slot machines will let off the usual gling-gling-gling you've come to expect from casinos and chime in just nicely. Terrorists will chatter and say stupid things like "Come and get me b****es!" and "Oh no, they're coming!" and they make you hate them. The music is the same tense orchestra tunes. I LOVE the opening intro, and the other beats are engaging at best and fit in during cued segments in the story mode, particularly to indicate plot twists or large-scale terrorist battles.

My favorite part of the old Rainbow Six's was always the ability to plan and execute daring runs through complex boards in open situations. To compensate for AI stupidity, which has always severely marred the series, Ubisoft lately makes their Rainbow games linear and simple. Instead of an assault on a complex with 6 entrances and assault a room with 2 entrances, and there is never any question how to breach.

This Rainbow is very curious in this manner. At first, I was sure the game was going to its roots. The weapon selection rocks and offers the customization I die for, and the aiming system finally seems to rely less on auto aim and more on intelligent movement, but this totally clashes with the gameplay style. Indeed, this is possibly the most arcadey shooter I have played in a while. You assemble your team (who do not matter,) and assault a linear track of enemies always placed in the same areas. There is little room for flanking, instead replaced by popping up and down shooting with little fanfare.

The new gameplay feature, the cover system, feels hackneyed and tacked on, creating more frustration than anything else. It tries to be somewhere between Perfect Dark Zero's no movement on the wall and Gears of War's constant cover but fails because it destroys the sense of urgency. Bullets don't whizz by, enemies rarely charge, and you can take a pretty exorbitant number of bullets before death. But don't worry about challenge, enemies often will just appear behind you, coming in at the same time every game. And their am is pretty good, so count on dying a few times in the 30+ minute missions before you complete it.

The offline game lasts at least 10 hours which is fairly standard of most shooters, but the online portion of the game (if of course you plan to play it) will last a very long time, for me at least. Getting to the highest rank is not easy and will take a lot of play time if you want to unlock all of the online content (the idea of customisable camouflage is certainly appealing).

Tom Clancy's Rainbow 6: Vegas has stood as one of the best tactical shooting franchises of all time. This entry is easily the best I've played and the most fun, the single-player is full of tough situations and smart tactics are important throughout. The multiplayer is tops with the best Xbox Live has to offer, practice is needed before you can really can into it but once you do it can consume you
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The Microsoft Xbox 360 Console: Powerful Gaming in a Box

by Mark Robbins

Gone are the days of drab, underpowered gaming consoles with limited features. The Microsoft Xbox 360 is here! It doesn't matter if you are a serious gamer or a mere hobbyist, the Xbox 360 that Microsoft launched in November 2005 is suitable for all players. It claims to have taken into consideration all the facets of ultimate gaming experience with this much-improved version of the original Microsoft Xbox that came out in November 2001.

Check your budget. Depending on what you can afford, you may start with the very basic core system composed of the light console, the wired controller and the composite AV cable; and when your budget allows you to purchase other peripherals one by one for the enhancement of your total gaming experience, maybe you'd want to change your wired controller with the wireless model, or maybe you'd want to add in the Xbox Live headset for amplification of sound effects to a mind-boggling level far above what your normal TV speakers could provide.

On the other hand, if you are one of those to whom "money is no object", you may just go ahead and buy the entire Microsoft Xbox 360 system, where everything is all in (i.e., the console with premium chrome finish, a wireless controller, the Xbox Live headset, component hard drive-AV cable, the Ethernet cable that allows you to connect with the other players, and the hard drive that contains an array of original Xbox games and allows you to download even more games. Since the Xbox 360 allows up to four wireless controllers operating on one console, it lets you play with three other players simultaneously for that added fun and challenge in live competition.

The Microsoft Xbox 360 gives you total digital entertainment. You may amplify and enhance your music and movies to a soothingly soft or to a ripping loud volume. Connect to the Internet and instantly stream your music, digital home movies, photographs and graphics or any other files stored in your hard disk, memory and other digital media that are Microsoft Windows XP-based PC that you want to share with others.

When attached to your TV, the Microsoft Xbox 360 takes advantage of the high-definition TV resolution in its full color and size that makes the game movie-like. Its anti-aliasing capability renders the animation flawlessly smooth and non-jerky, and the characters seem as though they are jumping out of the wide screen! When you are connected to the Internet via the Ethernet card, you have the Xbox Live headset, a facility that allows you to voice-chat with other players, thus combining active gaming with socialization.

There are games that are rated "must-have" because they are simply sensational with the Microsoft Xbox 360. These include Dead or Alive 4, Call of Duty 2 for the best WWII shooter, King Kong for great effects and Need for Speed Most Wanted for racing fans. For some odd reasons, some games that run with excellent audio and video effects using the first version of Xbox don't run as well in the Xbox 360; these include Madden NFL 06, NBA Live 06. This must be given immediate attention by the Microsoft people because it is a source of great disappointment for hardcore gamers and, in some cases, could be a deal-breaker.

Pressure is on for movie makers and game programmers/manufacturers to properly and visibly indicate the appropriate rating of their products on the packaging to provide guidance for buyers. In this regard, it is an added attraction to parents that the Microsoft Xbox 360 has settings that allow them to control how it is used by their children. The box has Family Settings which enable parents to shield their children from unsavory or unwholesome contacts. Family Settings perform two functions on the Xbox 360 console to allow or restrict access to offline games and/or DVD movies, and access to online contact and content via the Xbox Live environment.

ESRB is the regulating body that takes care of rating the propriety or impropriety of a game or movie based on age. ESRB's restrictions on games are EC (early childhood) for children below 6 years old, containing no inappropriate materials at all; E (everyone) for children younger than 13, and these have minimal violence and comic mischief but are substantial for character building. Some Xbox 360 games with an E rating include Ridge Racer 6 and NBA 2K6.

The rest of the ESRB ratings are: T (teen), which may also contain minimal violence, mild-to-strong language and/or suggestive themes; M (mature 17+) containing mature sexual themes or more intense violence and language; AO (adults only, for players aged 18+), which may include more graphic sexual themes and/or violence; and RP (rating pending) for games that have not been officially released yet.

With the safeguard placed by the Family Settings of the Microsoft Xbox 360 console, the parent feels safe buying the system for their kids. So, whatever the gaming preference of the child or the parent! -- Microsoft Xbox 360 promises to satisfy them.

Mark Robbins is a gamer providing valuable tips and advice on the new xbox 360 including information on hardware, games, and xbox 360 accessories.
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