Silent Hill Style Perspectives With Resident Evil Combat in Upcoming Agni: Village of Calamity
By Adele Wilson
An unauthorised investigation leads to something sinister.Face Ghosts To Collect Cards In Schoolbound
There's something strange about this place.90s Gloomy Survival Horror, Holstin, Switches Between Isometric and Third-Person
By Adele Wilson
An upcoming psychological survival horror.
Category: News
Gameglobe Diary #2: The Trouble with Trees
Gameglobe is a game creation engine and community developed by Square Enix and Bigpoint. The browser-based builder launched in closed beta in summer of 2012 and is now available for open play by anyone with an internet connection. This series will explore the features, benefits, and challenges of Gameglobe through the process of building a game from scratch. In this week's entry, we dive into tunnel building, figure out the benefits of tweaking, and plant an entire forest one tree at a time.Free Games and Sales: Dear Esther, Castle Crashers and more!
By Joe Jasko
Even though it can sometimes feel like there's a dearth of new game releases during those hot and carefree summer months, the amount of awesome sales and free games that tend to pop up around the same time is usually more than enough to fill that gaming void. And as luck would have it, we've managed to dig up a whole new assortment of fresh summer deals that you'll certainly want to be looking into to make it through the rest of July!CONTEST: Win some awesome Pacific Rim toys!
By Joe Jasko
Last week, Pacific Rim from Reliance Games hit the App Store in a flurry of giant robot fisticuffs, and stood to serve as a mobile tie-in to the Guillermo del Toro film of the same name. In the game, players can take control of giant weaponized robots called Jaegers and pound the guts out of a monstrous alien race called the Kaiju. I guess the only thing that's really better than enormous monsters is equally enormous fighting robots that were built specifically to destroy them.Hands-on with Worms Clan Wars
A bit of inner turmoil always accompanies the purchase of the newest Worms game. Do I really need this? I just bought one last year. Ten seconds later: Okay, fine, I'll get it. Despite the general sameness of each title with minute changes to keep things fresh, Team17 consistently makes just enough of those changes to warrant the yearly refresh. Worms Clan Wars follows in this mold, making lots of little updates, plus one big one.Kickstarter Picks: Precinct, Codename Cygnus, and more!
Only three weeks into our new penta-pick format for Kickstarter, and I already can't remember how we ever got by with only one. There are simply too many amazing projects worth sharing, and sometimes doubling up just makes sense. Case in point: Sierra receives two shout-outs this week, making this your one-stop destination for adventure game nostalgia, among other great projects.Halfbrick announces Colossatron: Massive World Threat
By Joe Jasko
After a vague teaser trailer was released on the developer's blog earlier this week, it became pretty clear that Fruit Ninja developer Halfbrick was up to something. Well we can now tell you that the mysterious new game has been officially unveiled by Halfbrick at PAX Australia, and it carries the quite intimidating name of Colossatron: Massive World Threat.Neverwinter Review Diary #3: Group means group
By Nick Tylwalk
Proper MMORPG reviews are difficult to do. Except for power levelers, the whole idea of playing a game in that genre is that it's a marathon, not a sprint. That doesn't mesh well with the concept of deadlines, which is what editors usually insist upon.Ouya makes Kickstarter plans to fund more exclusive games for new console
By Joe Jasko
It's been a bit of a bumpy ride for the launch of Kickstarter success story Ouya, the home-based Android-powered console. After an initial delay of release to commercial users, reports of dysfunctional controllers, and a limited game library, Ouya has already begun to set some plans in motion to ensure that the rest of 2013 and beyond goes a whole lot smoother. And they're preparing to tackle the most pressing issue directly head on: the lack of exclusive games.