Page 1 of 1

TOP GAMES .

PostPosted: Sun Mar 01, 2015 7:46 am
by Alex Green
Get ready for an amazing experience , Because I am going to tell you the best 4 games from mid 2014 to
2015 . They are mostly new released . I will give the games public vote , reviews , graphics details and an expert review.

DISCUSS THE GAMES YOU LIKE.

1 → FAR CRY 4
Image

Good Stuff
Bewildering number of activities
Compelling characters and story
Bad Stuff
Stealth sections undermine open approach


GRAPHICS → 9

DESIGN → 8

DEPTH → 9

ADDICTIVENESS→ 8


You need time to deal with Far Cry 4. A lot of time.

You certainly ideally want more than the four days we were allowed with Ubisoft’s new open world shooter. This isn’t to say you won’t be able to finish the game’s main campaign in the time we were allotted to play it in, because we did. That’s just to say that that there’s so much more going on in Far Cry 4 beyond its narrative that it could keep players glued to it for weeks. Possibly months.

The reason for this is that Far Cry 4 puts a premium on distraction. Players may set out intent on taking part in a story mission, but on their way to a checkpoint they’ll invariably run across a radar tower or an enemy-held outpost or even a herd of animals whose pelts they need to unlock a weapon slot and all of a sudden, their original motivation goes flying out the window.




2 → Grand Theft Auto V PS4 and Xbox One
Image


GOOD STUFF
Benchmark for an open world
Fantastic variation in missions
Eye-wateringly beautiful
BAD STUFF
First Person Mode is fiddly while driving
Everyone in the game is still relentlessly hateful



Grand Theft Auto V PS4 and Xbox One review
Grand Theft Auto 5 is the benchmark for open world games. Even new gen offerings such as Watch Dogs, Dead Rising 3 and the HD port of the really rather good GTA clone Sleeping Dogs can’t compete with it. Players controlled three protagonists, sure, but the game’s biggest and most important character was the city of Los Santos itself; even though it’s a pared down version of the City Of Angels, Los Santos felt – and still feels – like a living, breathing city – albeit one whose denizens are beyond twisted.

Los Santos perfectly captures the essence and otherworldliness of the city it’s based on; it’s a place where the American Dream and its twin Nightmare mesh into some ungodly whole. A place in which the luxury mansions of Rockford Hills gazes down over winding streets on rolling hills into the glistening glass and concrete of downtown. Blaine County’s dustbowl of trailer parks and gas stations looks positively post apocalyptic and the ghetto neighbourhoods of Ganton and Davis buzz with palpable menace.

But beyond its neon-encrusted strip malls, towering skyscrapers and beachfront hipster hives, what really immerses players in Los Santos is its population – both the NPCs walking the streets and the antagonists that the players run into. The paparazzi scumbag motorcyclist, the abusive fitness freak at the beach, the bounty hunters in Blaine, the beggars on the street, the odd couple yelling about which movie they should see – the density and detail of these NPCs bring Los Santos to life and makes players feel like a part of it. And it’s on bringing the player closer to this sense of immersion that Rockstar North has wisely focused for its new gen version of Grand Theft Auto 5.


3 →The Last of Us Remastered
Image
Image

Graphics
9
design
10
depth
9
addictiveness
10

image: http://images.cdn.stuff.tv/sites/stuff. ... f/logo.png

HomeMENU
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The Last of Us Remastered review
The definitive version of one of gaming’s landmark titles; The Last of Us Remastered is essential for newcomers and veterans alike
from £38.00
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image: http://images.cdn.stuff.tv/sites/stuff. ... k=wjf8ryAH

The Last of Us Remastered
image:

The Last of Us Remastered
image:



image:

The Last of Us Remastered
image:

The Last of Us Remastered
image:

The Last of Us Remastered
image:

The Last of Us Remastered
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
2 / 8
The Last of Us Remastered
28 JULY 2014/17:26BST
by Guy Cocker


Describing The Last of Us as a massive success would be a bit of an understatement. Not only did it sell a bajillion copies, it earned over 200 Game of the Year awards and a Best Game Bafta. And let’s not forget that 2013 also featured a little-known title called Grand Theft Auto 5.

In The Last of Us Remastered the already technically spectacular PS3 game gets the PS4 treatment, with higher resolution graphics and a 60 frames per second refresh rate. Not only that, but it bundles in bonus extras such as director commentaries, multiplayer map packs and the excellent Left Behind story DLC.

If you played it the first time around you’ve now got the perfect excuse to play through again, and anyone who missed it on PS3 is in for a gaming experience like no other.

READ MORE: Our original The Last of Us PS3 review

FIRST OF ALL...


Hopefully you’ve heard of The Last of Us by now, but just in case, it’s a third-person action adventure from Naughty Dog, the makers of the fabulous Uncharted series.

It's much darker than the Indiana Jones-like adventures of Nathan Drake, instead casting you as the grizzled Joel, one of the few human survivors left after a virus has turned most of population into zombie-like mutants. For reasons too interesting to spoil, Joel has to escort the young Ellie across a ravaged United States, using improvised weapons and stealth against terrifying zombies and the often violent and predatory remains of humanity.

That’s the broad setup for what is a heavily story-driven game, and thanks mainly to the relationship between Joel and Ellie, it’s a truly exceptional, emotional, sometimes humourous, sometimes harrowing, always thought-provoking narrative. The lines between right and wrong are blurred, combat is frantic, desperate and always about survival. Essentially, there's no other game story with this sort of depth or maturity.

It’s so good, in fact, that it’s currently being turned into a movie through producer Sam Raimi, and he’s really not going to have to do much to it for the movie to be a rip-roaring success.


4 → Forza Horizon 2
Image
Image

The Horizon of its name is a huge festival held in the middle of the Franco-Italian countryside, from which the racing events you participate in are operated. A bit like the FIA if it were run by a bunch of ravers. In truth the festival is at odds with the surroundings in which you drive. It’s all lasers, whooping and EDM, dropped jarringly amid rolling hills dotted with vineyards, delicate farm cottages and quaint little market towns with piazzas at the centre.

Apart from your irritating host, Ben, a man who’s about as likeable as a wannabe Top Gear presenter, it’s actually pretty easy to ignore the festival side of things. Turn off the radio (it’s usually better to hear the sound of your engine anyway) and you can almost forget the festival exists. That’s because each tournament takes place away from the site itself, in one of many geographically distinct regions.


Dont worry friends I will be posting 2 games daily .

PostPosted: Sun Mar 01, 2015 7:50 am
by New Werpland
This should be elsewhere, not in General.

PostPosted: Sun Mar 01, 2015 7:52 am
by Val Halla
Didn't you get warned not to do this twice today already?

PostPosted: Sun Mar 01, 2015 7:53 am
by New Werpland
Val Halla wrote:Didn't you get warned not to do this twice today already?

Maybe he wants to get banned

PostPosted: Sun Mar 01, 2015 7:55 am
by Alex Green
What ?

PostPosted: Sun Mar 01, 2015 7:55 am
by Jute
Alex Green wrote:Get ready for an amazing experience , Because I am going to tell you the best 5 games from mid 2014 to
2015 . They are mostly new released . I will give the games public vote , reviews , graphics details and an expert review.

1 → FAR CRY 4
(Image)

Good Stuff
Bewildering number of activities
Compelling characters and story
Bad Stuff
Stealth sections undermine open approach


GRAPHICS → 9

DESIGN → 8

DEPTH → 9

ADDICTIVENESS→ 8


You need time to deal with Far Cry 4. A lot of time.

You certainly ideally want more than the four days we were allowed with Ubisoft’s new open world shooter. This isn’t to say you won’t be able to finish the game’s main campaign in the time we were allotted to play it in, because we did. That’s just to say that that there’s so much more going on in Far Cry 4 beyond its narrative that it could keep players glued to it for weeks. Possibly months.

The reason for this is that Far Cry 4 puts a premium on distraction. Players may set out intent on taking part in a story mission, but on their way to a checkpoint they’ll invariably run across a radar tower or an enemy-held outpost or even a herd of animals whose pelts they need to unlock a weapon slot and all of a sudden, their original motivation goes flying out the window.




2 → Grand Theft Auto V PS4 and Xbox One
(Image)


GOOD STUFF
Benchmark for an open world
Fantastic variation in missions
Eye-wateringly beautiful
BAD STUFF
First Person Mode is fiddly while driving
Everyone in the game is still relentlessly hateful



Grand Theft Auto V PS4 and Xbox One review
Grand Theft Auto 5 is the benchmark for open world games. Even new gen offerings such as Watch Dogs, Dead Rising 3 and the HD port of the really rather good GTA clone Sleeping Dogs can’t compete with it. Players controlled three protagonists, sure, but the game’s biggest and most important character was the city of Los Santos itself; even though it’s a pared down version of the City Of Angels, Los Santos felt – and still feels – like a living, breathing city – albeit one whose denizens are beyond twisted.

Los Santos perfectly captures the essence and otherworldliness of the city it’s based on; it’s a place where the American Dream and its twin Nightmare mesh into some ungodly whole. A place in which the luxury mansions of Rockford Hills gazes down over winding streets on rolling hills into the glistening glass and concrete of downtown. Blaine County’s dustbowl of trailer parks and gas stations looks positively post apocalyptic and the ghetto neighbourhoods of Ganton and Davis buzz with palpable menace.

But beyond its neon-encrusted strip malls, towering skyscrapers and beachfront hipster hives, what really immerses players in Los Santos is its population – both the NPCs walking the streets and the antagonists that the players run into. The paparazzi scumbag motorcyclist, the abusive fitness freak at the beach, the bounty hunters in Blaine, the beggars on the street, the odd couple yelling about which movie they should see – the density and detail of these NPCs bring Los Santos to life and makes players feel like a part of it. And it’s on bringing the player closer to this sense of immersion that Rockstar North has wisely focused for its new gen version of Grand Theft Auto 5.


3 →The Last of Us Remastered
(Image)
(Image)

Graphics
9
design
10
depth
9
addictiveness
10

image: http://images.cdn.stuff.tv/sites/stuff. ... f/logo.png

HomeMENU
Advertisement

The Last of Us Remastered review
The definitive version of one of gaming’s landmark titles; The Last of Us Remastered is essential for newcomers and veterans alike
from £38.00
36
24
0
23
image: http://images.cdn.stuff.tv/sites/stuff. ... k=wjf8ryAH

The Last of Us Remastered
image:

The Last of Us Remastered
image:



image:

The Last of Us Remastered
image:

The Last of Us Remastered
image:

The Last of Us Remastered
image:

The Last of Us Remastered
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
2 / 8
The Last of Us Remastered
28 JULY 2014/17:26BST
by Guy Cocker


Describing The Last of Us as a massive success would be a bit of an understatement. Not only did it sell a bajillion copies, it earned over 200 Game of the Year awards and a Best Game Bafta. And let’s not forget that 2013 also featured a little-known title called Grand Theft Auto 5.

In The Last of Us Remastered the already technically spectacular PS3 game gets the PS4 treatment, with higher resolution graphics and a 60 frames per second refresh rate. Not only that, but it bundles in bonus extras such as director commentaries, multiplayer map packs and the excellent Left Behind story DLC.

If you played it the first time around you’ve now got the perfect excuse to play through again, and anyone who missed it on PS3 is in for a gaming experience like no other.

READ MORE: Our original The Last of Us PS3 review

FIRST OF ALL...


Hopefully you’ve heard of The Last of Us by now, but just in case, it’s a third-person action adventure from Naughty Dog, the makers of the fabulous Uncharted series.

It's much darker than the Indiana Jones-like adventures of Nathan Drake, instead casting you as the grizzled Joel, one of the few human survivors left after a virus has turned most of population into zombie-like mutants. For reasons too interesting to spoil, Joel has to escort the young Ellie across a ravaged United States, using improvised weapons and stealth against terrifying zombies and the often violent and predatory remains of humanity.

That’s the broad setup for what is a heavily story-driven game, and thanks mainly to the relationship between Joel and Ellie, it’s a truly exceptional, emotional, sometimes humourous, sometimes harrowing, always thought-provoking narrative. The lines between right and wrong are blurred, combat is frantic, desperate and always about survival. Essentially, there's no other game story with this sort of depth or maturity.

It’s so good, in fact, that it’s currently being turned into a movie through producer Sam Raimi, and he’s really not going to have to do much to it for the movie to be a rip-roaring success.


4 → Forza Horizon 2
(Image)
(Image)

The Horizon of its name is a huge festival held in the middle of the Franco-Italian countryside, from which the racing events you participate in are operated. A bit like the FIA if it were run by a bunch of ravers. In truth the festival is at odds with the surroundings in which you drive. It’s all lasers, whooping and EDM, dropped jarringly amid rolling hills dotted with vineyards, delicate farm cottages and quaint little market towns with piazzas at the centre.

Apart from your irritating host, Ben, a man who’s about as likeable as a wannabe Top Gear presenter, it’s actually pretty easy to ignore the festival side of things. Turn off the radio (it’s usually better to hear the sound of your engine anyway) and you can almost forget the festival exists. That’s because each tournament takes place away from the site itself, in one of many geographically distinct regions.


Dont worry friends I will be posting 2 games daily .

Sorry, this would fit better into Forum 7. Also, you listed 4 games even though you promised a top 5.

PostPosted: Sun Mar 01, 2015 7:58 am
by Alex Green
Jute wrote:
Alex Green wrote:Get ready for an amazing experience , Because I am going to tell you the best 5 games from mid 2014 to
2015 . They are mostly new released . I will give the games public vote , reviews , graphics details and an expert review.

1 → FAR CRY 4
(Image)

Good Stuff
Bewildering number of activities
Compelling characters and story
Bad Stuff
Stealth sections undermine open approach


GRAPHICS → 9

DESIGN → 8

DEPTH → 9

ADDICTIVENESS→ 8


You need time to deal with Far Cry 4. A lot of time.

You certainly ideally want more than the four days we were allowed with Ubisoft’s new open world shooter. This isn’t to say you won’t be able to finish the game’s main campaign in the time we were allotted to play it in, because we did. That’s just to say that that there’s so much more going on in Far Cry 4 beyond its narrative that it could keep players glued to it for weeks. Possibly months.

The reason for this is that Far Cry 4 puts a premium on distraction. Players may set out intent on taking part in a story mission, but on their way to a checkpoint they’ll invariably run across a radar tower or an enemy-held outpost or even a herd of animals whose pelts they need to unlock a weapon slot and all of a sudden, their original motivation goes flying out the window.




2 → Grand Theft Auto V PS4 and Xbox One
(Image)


GOOD STUFF
Benchmark for an open world
Fantastic variation in missions
Eye-wateringly beautiful
BAD STUFF
First Person Mode is fiddly while driving
Everyone in the game is still relentlessly hateful



Grand Theft Auto V PS4 and Xbox One review
Grand Theft Auto 5 is the benchmark for open world games. Even new gen offerings such as Watch Dogs, Dead Rising 3 and the HD port of the really rather good GTA clone Sleeping Dogs can’t compete with it. Players controlled three protagonists, sure, but the game’s biggest and most important character was the city of Los Santos itself; even though it’s a pared down version of the City Of Angels, Los Santos felt – and still feels – like a living, breathing city – albeit one whose denizens are beyond twisted.

Los Santos perfectly captures the essence and otherworldliness of the city it’s based on; it’s a place where the American Dream and its twin Nightmare mesh into some ungodly whole. A place in which the luxury mansions of Rockford Hills gazes down over winding streets on rolling hills into the glistening glass and concrete of downtown. Blaine County’s dustbowl of trailer parks and gas stations looks positively post apocalyptic and the ghetto neighbourhoods of Ganton and Davis buzz with palpable menace.

But beyond its neon-encrusted strip malls, towering skyscrapers and beachfront hipster hives, what really immerses players in Los Santos is its population – both the NPCs walking the streets and the antagonists that the players run into. The paparazzi scumbag motorcyclist, the abusive fitness freak at the beach, the bounty hunters in Blaine, the beggars on the street, the odd couple yelling about which movie they should see – the density and detail of these NPCs bring Los Santos to life and makes players feel like a part of it. And it’s on bringing the player closer to this sense of immersion that Rockstar North has wisely focused for its new gen version of Grand Theft Auto 5.


3 →The Last of Us Remastered
(Image)
(Image)

Graphics
9
design
10
depth
9
addictiveness
10

image: http://images.cdn.stuff.tv/sites/stuff. ... f/logo.png

HomeMENU
Advertisement

The Last of Us Remastered review
The definitive version of one of gaming’s landmark titles; The Last of Us Remastered is essential for newcomers and veterans alike
from £38.00
36
24
0
23
image: http://images.cdn.stuff.tv/sites/stuff. ... k=wjf8ryAH

The Last of Us Remastered
image:

The Last of Us Remastered
image:



image:

The Last of Us Remastered
image:

The Last of Us Remastered
image:

The Last of Us Remastered
image:

The Last of Us Remastered
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
2 / 8
The Last of Us Remastered
28 JULY 2014/17:26BST
by Guy Cocker


Describing The Last of Us as a massive success would be a bit of an understatement. Not only did it sell a bajillion copies, it earned over 200 Game of the Year awards and a Best Game Bafta. And let’s not forget that 2013 also featured a little-known title called Grand Theft Auto 5.

In The Last of Us Remastered the already technically spectacular PS3 game gets the PS4 treatment, with higher resolution graphics and a 60 frames per second refresh rate. Not only that, but it bundles in bonus extras such as director commentaries, multiplayer map packs and the excellent Left Behind story DLC.

If you played it the first time around you’ve now got the perfect excuse to play through again, and anyone who missed it on PS3 is in for a gaming experience like no other.

READ MORE: Our original The Last of Us PS3 review

FIRST OF ALL...


Hopefully you’ve heard of The Last of Us by now, but just in case, it’s a third-person action adventure from Naughty Dog, the makers of the fabulous Uncharted series.

It's much darker than the Indiana Jones-like adventures of Nathan Drake, instead casting you as the grizzled Joel, one of the few human survivors left after a virus has turned most of population into zombie-like mutants. For reasons too interesting to spoil, Joel has to escort the young Ellie across a ravaged United States, using improvised weapons and stealth against terrifying zombies and the often violent and predatory remains of humanity.

That’s the broad setup for what is a heavily story-driven game, and thanks mainly to the relationship between Joel and Ellie, it’s a truly exceptional, emotional, sometimes humourous, sometimes harrowing, always thought-provoking narrative. The lines between right and wrong are blurred, combat is frantic, desperate and always about survival. Essentially, there's no other game story with this sort of depth or maturity.

It’s so good, in fact, that it’s currently being turned into a movie through producer Sam Raimi, and he’s really not going to have to do much to it for the movie to be a rip-roaring success.


4 → Forza Horizon 2
(Image)
(Image)

The Horizon of its name is a huge festival held in the middle of the Franco-Italian countryside, from which the racing events you participate in are operated. A bit like the FIA if it were run by a bunch of ravers. In truth the festival is at odds with the surroundings in which you drive. It’s all lasers, whooping and EDM, dropped jarringly amid rolling hills dotted with vineyards, delicate farm cottages and quaint little market towns with piazzas at the centre.

Apart from your irritating host, Ben, a man who’s about as likeable as a wannabe Top Gear presenter, it’s actually pretty easy to ignore the festival side of things. Turn off the radio (it’s usually better to hear the sound of your engine anyway) and you can almost forget the festival exists. That’s because each tournament takes place away from the site itself, in one of many geographically distinct regions.


Dont worry friends I will be posting 2 games daily .

Sorry, this would fit better into Forum 7. Also, you listed 4 games even though you promised a top 5.

Yes I am doing the 5th one.

PostPosted: Sun Mar 01, 2015 7:58 am
by The States of Balloon
ALL CAPS.



Also what are we supposed to discuss here. Val is right, this should be in Arts and Fiction.

PostPosted: Sun Mar 01, 2015 8:01 am
by Alex Green
The States of Balloon wrote:ALL CAPS.



Also what are we supposed to discuss here. Val is right, this should be in Arts and Fiction.

DISCUSS THE GAMES YOU LIKE.

PostPosted: Sun Mar 01, 2015 8:02 am
by The States of Balloon
Alex Green wrote:
The States of Balloon wrote:ALL CAPS.



Also what are we supposed to discuss here. Val is right, this should be in Arts and Fiction.

DISCUSS THE GAMES YOU LIKE.

What if don't like the games.

PostPosted: Sun Mar 01, 2015 8:04 am
by Alex Green
The States of Balloon wrote:
Alex Green wrote:DISCUSS THE GAMES YOU LIKE.

What if don't like the games.

Then byy .

PostPosted: Sun Mar 01, 2015 8:38 am
by The States of Balloon
Alex Green wrote:
The States of Balloon wrote:What if don't like the games.

Then byy .

Byy .

PostPosted: Sun Mar 01, 2015 8:38 am
by The 93rd Coalition
I believe this belongs in "Arts and fiction." Eh?

PostPosted: Sun Mar 01, 2015 8:48 am
by The States of Balloon
The 93rd Coalition wrote:I believe this belongs in "Arts and fiction." Eh?

yEh.

PostPosted: Sun Mar 01, 2015 9:01 am
by The Archregimancy
Last warning...

Please stop starting spam threads in General.