In this oft-delayed, highly anticipated podcast, DesertEagle pledges his allegiance to Queen and country with impressions of Goldeneye 007 and James Bond 007: Blood Stone, as well as hosting Southampton developers Megadev, creators of pleasing ...
Read More »Monster Mash: Bakugan: Defenders of the Core Review
It’s been over a year since Bakugan first made its gaming debut with Bakugan: Battle Brawlers. Enthralled with the concept of Bakugan’s skill-meets-strategy gameplay, I tried it and enjoyed it, despite a few foundational flaws. ...
Read More »Stirring, Not Shaken- James Bond 007: Blood Stone Review
Games based on cinematic licenses are a consistently tricky proposition. For every competent interpretation of a movie, as illustrated by the Chronicles of Riddick titles, players seem to get a handful of awkward adaptations- such ...
Read More »Pièce de Résistance- Art Academy Review
Twentieth-century social commentator Will Rogers once wrote, “Many only learn in two ways- one by reading, and the other by association with smarter people.” For the last four years, Nintendo’s executives have been eagerly attempting ...
Read More »Wizardly- Pinball FX 2 Review
Rising from the ashes of a discarded stack of plungers, springs, flippers and drop targets, the pinball phoenix is in the midst of rebirth. With titles as diverse as Crave’s Williams and Gottlieb collections to ...
Read More »New Releases 11/7-11/13: Cold Metal Edition
Forgot about those gold and platinum edition games for a moment; this week’s new release are all about a much more useful material- alloyed steel. From Black Ops‘ collection of light, submachine, and sniper rifles, ...
Read More »Flash Fingers- DJ Max Portable 3 Review
Regrettably, portable rhythm games are usually at a disadvantage when compared to their console counterparts. With the exception of the faux-fret peripheral for the Nintendo DS iterations of Guitar Hero, handheld titles fail to recreate ...
Read More »School of Rock- Rock Band 3 Review
Even the savviest analyst couldn’t have predicted the impact Harmonix would have on gaming. While some might have forecasted 2005’s Guitar Hero launching an industry of plastic guitars and rhythm games in the West, few ...
Read More »Z.H.P. Unlosing Contest vs. Imaginative Superpowered Readers
As the most recent releases from NIS America superbly illustrates, becoming an Earth-saving superhero is no easy task. Yet, we’ve devised a way to make the process just a bit easier. To win one of ...
Read More »Rescuing the Rhythm Genre? – DJ Hero 2 Review
After spending the last four years strumming down note highways with a plastic six-string, 2009’s DJ Hero offered a refreshing reprieve. Sure, the three colored buttons on the mock-turntable were recontextualized fretboard buttons, but the ...
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