Dust off your PixlBit and see what the staff have to say after finishing Super Mario Galaxy 2. Well, most of us have anyway.
Jason: Hey everyone!
Dust off your PixlBit and see what the staff have to say after finishing Super Mario Galaxy 2. Well, most of us have anyway.
Jason: Hey everyone!
One of the most comfortable traditional style controllers ever created.
With the launch of Monster Hunter Tri, Nintendo and Capcom have partnered up to release a bundle of the game with the Classic Controller Pro. For those who aren't familiar, the Classic Controller Pro is a revision of the regular Classic Controller. While not much has changed in the revision, Nintendo has addressed practically all of the Classic Controller's faults and created one of the most comfortable controllers that they have ever produced.
Are you a bad enough dude to play these old school arcade games?
Though not the most popular game developer or publisher, Data East has made many cult arcade titles adored by fans years after their creation. In addition to being somewhat of a cult company, Data East was also one of the first Japanese arcade companies that successfully released their games to North American arcades. Data East Arcade Classics is a collection of these works, some of which earn the title of classic and others which don’t even approach it.
The PlayStation Portable version featuring numerous updates of the critically acclaimed Atlus title, Persona 3, is now available in stores.
Team17's popular XBLA title receives new DLC content today for 400 MS Points.
High Voltage Software and Sega's latest title is available today exclusively for the Wii at the budget price of $29.99
A disappointing port of a great game.
When Earthworm Jim initially launched in 1994 it was lauded for its great gameplay and surreal level and character designs. 16 years later, Gameloft has ported Earthworm Jim to DSiWare and while the game is mostly faithful to the Sega Genesis and SNES versions, it unfortunately features many technical faults, which makes this version disappointing and inferior to the original versions.
The latest in the Ys saga is looking sharp in this short gameplay trailer from E3.
I return from my E3 break with a fishing game, which, unfortunately, is no more exciting than a never-ending press conference.
There are certain concepts which simply don't work well as a videogame, and fishing is one of those. I'm not into fishing myself, but I can see the appeal in it. It can be just you, out on a boat in the middle of a lake on a beautiful day, sitting back with your feet up, fresh air all around, no one around to bother you, all your troubles forgotten. When you're playing a fishing videogame, then it's just you, on a couch in the middle of an ugly living room decorated by your roommate who has bad taste, sitting back with your feet resting on a pile of empty pizza boxes, hot, stuffy air all around, and your troubles are just one phone ring away. The experience isn't one which can be replicated by a videogame.
The latest in the Ys series continues to improve the formula set in place many years ago.
Ys Seven is the first game developed specifically for the PSP by original developer Nihon Falcom. The team is continuing much of the progress they have made in the series by adding onto everything established in Ys VI: The Ark of Napishtim.