What StrawberryDiesel is trying to say is, anyone has has a legitimate, unforced opinion and who actually uses the ENTIRE rating spectrum shouldn't be taken seriously.
When has Sterling ever been hateful of Sony? He has issues with the fanbase and the majority of big business, but no man that gives Killzone 3 a straight-up 10 has an issue with Sony itself.
At the end of the day, it's a game. While the industry is moving closer towards mature interactive storytelling, it shouldn't mean that the ridiculousness of a few games should ruin it. People are entitled to have fun. Games aren't films, and shouldn't be treated as taboo because they're different.
Takedown was the first Burnout title I played and it most consuming "sports" title I'd played since Tony Hawk's Pro Skater 2.
Bringing the series back after Paradise would be outstanding. Criterion have the talent for it.
People should actually read the article. At no point do they say they're "way beyond" next-gen consoles. It's entirely misleading and deliberately puts them in a bad light.
Furthermore, no one graphics card can currently run the original Crysis at peak settings running at a consistent 60fps. Not even the recent GTX 690. Say what you will about every subsequent Crysis title, the first game (which was released 5 years ago) is STILL the benchmark and will remai...
The profile picture should have been the story here.
"Molyneux concedes defeat and accepts the fact that he looks like a turtle"
Nothing is really blowing me away for this end of year release schedule. Assassin's Creed 3 is probably the given, and maybe Resident Evil 6, but nothing gets me pumped like Watch Dogs, Bioshock Infinite and Last of Us for 2013.
It felt fairly expansive just from viewing the trailer. I hope it's at least upwards of 20 hours. Would make for some absolutely marathon playthroughs.
I almost puked after he said "innovational".
My favourite title at E3 and conceptually the most interesting. Obviously The Last of Us will be the requisite greatness we've come to expect from Naughty Dog, but Ubisoft really brought their A-game too.
Cannot wait to see more.
Haven't seen Last of Us footage yet, but it'd have to be pretty special to beat out my excitement for Watch Dogs. Absolutely incredible.
EDIT: Just watched it. Got. Damn.
It's hilarious when people talk down cloud gaming, simply because it doesn't work as well right now. I'm guessing that also means it won't work in the future right?
Nice mindset.
Is it any wonder Sony has been rumoured to get on board with the idea? Whether you like it or not, it'll be a part of gaming in the near future. It slashes the production costs for publishers.
Bookmark that incredibly naive comment by OneAboveAll...
In addition, I didn't feel that Dead Space 2 was scary at all. In fact, I'd go so far as to call it an action game. It looks like the third title is going in that direction as well, and if their intention was to make a horror game, then they've lost the plot.
I feel like Resistance 3 took a LOT from Half Life 2, but in turn, it made it a much better game. It can only benefit the scale of Metro too.
I'm still blown away that people thought Lords of Shadow was derivative. It stands on its own as a great action game and in my personal opinion, one of the most underrated titles this generation has produced.
There is much to be improved upon though, and I can't wait to see what MercurySteam come up with.
Looking at the disagrees, people can be INCREDIBLY short-sighted when it comes to cloud gaming. Whether you like it or not, it's an evolutionary concept. It'll still take years to refine and perfect, but it also allows access to games that many can't afford to play on monolithic PC rigs, hence why Sony are rumoured to get on-board with the idea.
This is the kind of sequel I love to see. Metro 2033 was a decent title with a heap of potential. It certainly looks like they've made the most of it with Last Light. I'll be picking up a GTX 600 series card in the near future to play this bad boy on PC.
I'm pretty tired of the whole zombie thing right now, but I checked out DayZ on a whim and it's the real deal. It's not overtly gory or anything, but the map is gigantic and the tension is high, especially when it's just you and the sound of nature. It takes some getting used to on a count of Arma II's simulated experience, but still well worth a purchase. It's true survival horror from an unexpected place.
Staggering article. THIS is good game journalism people. Schwartz's comments are mind-blowing, especially the Project Icebreaker situation. Business is brutal.
Still got my chunky-ass 80gb model. Thing looks like the goddamn monolith from 2001: a space odyssey.