if only. xbox isn't the right platform to do it justice.
hmm, I'm very interested in this. The first i love bees was very good and could have stood alone as something like a SyFy miniseries funded by Microsoft.
indeed, even Sains Row 3 is looking like a better driving game.
mileage then to make up for the shallowness of the experience?
really hoping it is a kick ass experience [more than we've seen so far] the whole way through to encourage a buy before having to return it to the video store. or perhaps a compelling demo...
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:( they even SAY High Stakes.. that's depressing because they could have just made High Stakes 2 with a proper career mode that wasn't focused on story, or went hand in hand w...
besides Spartacus...
sepuku?
which you don't really. what you want to own is a right to play license. What you think you have is a righ to play, until the physical media is damaged and you need to replace it.
Once the media is no longer readable.. you'd have to go back out and buy it, packaged, all over again. What's the point in that?
apprently since that means he doesn't belive in free to play or traditional MMOs.
it really is, you can do your social networking, watch movies, listen to music etc without downloading anything.
What OnLive could really do is get their hardware built into DTV set-top boxes and TVs. That way cabletv and IP service providers would get a cut of the profit AND be able to sell their premium gaming enabled PVRs and premium wireless Voip routers. Heck if you have an HDTV you probably have a Digital Terminal or PVR already on rental, just upgrade it.
as they could 3D gaming with Xbox, publish more PC games, and deliver a better Windows user experience. Mobile Xbox, support for Bluray or develop their own HD disc format etc.
They. don't. want. to.
Seeing that OnLive is a lesser evil to their business than Valve, OnLive is in a position if they have the capacity to do so to help grow Xbox Live. It would be interesting to see if they have any technology that Microsoft could incorporate directly into the...
moreover, they (publishers) should see (as is your point) that games can be marketed directly to adults but aren't.
They just aren't taken seriously and when they should be, like Homefront, somewhere along the line someone decides it should be nerfed and released unfinished regardless of the budget, time, and how much it could really appeal to mature audiences.
it is a pity.
or you guys could think of OnLive as Steam without the fanbase or exclusive games.
Valve could also be asking for Microsoft to put Steam on Xbox Live, if only to sell things more effectively and so be in direct competition with MS their partners and retail.
All OnLive would be doing for itself is protecting the future of online based games, something MS probably wouldn't let them do. BUT it isn't impossible for MS to consider adding them like Last.f...
the stink of mediocrity must have finally gotten to them.
screw the console itself, bring on the games. Might take years for devs to really exploit a DS home console with adequate or exceptional new and exclusive games (even Sony doesn't do it with PSP).
QFT
But if they were just waiting for it to be affordable.. the least they could have done was include BD and local multiplayer with optional purchase of an extra new controller. wtv
Still wondering when games will really start being able to do this kind of simulation in realtime in a normal game, not a techdemo. Hardware apparently has a ways to go before processing will be wasted on making proper shadows, water, fire, smoke and other particle effects look real.
i.e. the marketing team will have to save this one since the hardware and game devs dropped the ball.
and I wish them great success and for the team to not forget that tons of content and a game that isn't overhyped is worth more than burning money and talent on mediocrity.
it is a winning franchise so hopefully this is true.
well yes obviously, but Railroads! is also fun.
I'm hoping the next in any of the 3 series will be made soon and with enough quality that it can reach a large audience online and off.