I was a skeptic about the news for a new DS featuring a camera, dual touch screens and MP3 player.. It just didn't seem like a logical move on Nintendo's part because it's a move you'd expect Sony to make. As a result I classified this as false news and decided not to bother with it, but it appears that I was wrong. That or the world is playing a very cruel joke.
Anyway, Nintendo announced a new DS called DSi which features dual touch screens (why? No idea) , camera (why? No idea), and an MP3 player, but suffers from lower battery life.
I guess they're trying to turn the DS into more than just a video games system and more like something to carry around on a daily basis, snapping up photos and listening to music.
LBP is in beta, and it was only a matter of time before people started posting videos, so it doesn't surprise us that someone built the infamous 1-1 from Super Mario Bros on the NES.
Bungie have done a lot over the past few weeks to get people to fish out their copies of Halo 3, and I'm certainly buying what they're selling.
Amongst the numerous announcements they've made to celebrate Halo 3's 1st birthday, a teaser trailer for an allegedly new campaign has been released.
At the moment the details are sketchy, which is why this is a teaser and nothing more. Could it be the real ending to Halo 3 that so many people felt was unfinished? Only time will tell.
When this first arrived I was quite excited, heard nothing
particularly bad about it, looked alright, and I was really looking forward to
a new gaming experience. Oh how I rue that day...
In reality, in short, UAW is annoying, deep, interesting and
tedious. How so? Well that’ll all be explained...
SAN MATEO, CA — September 22, 2008 — Capcom® Entertainment, a leading worldwide developer and publisher of video games, today announced that Mega Man® 9 is now available for download on Nintendo’s WiiWare™ service, and will be available for the PLAYSTATION®Network on September 25, and Xbox LIVE® Arcade on October 1.
Paul Jackson, director general of ELSPA, the Entertainment & Leisure Software Publishers Association, has told the government that the BBFC is ‘not fit for purpose’ as a ratings system for computer games.
The case for the video games industry embracing PEGI (Pan-European Game Information) as the only effective age rating system gathered further momentum today following Atari’s announcement that 90 per cent of its output will be released online in a few years’ time. Atari CEO David Gardiner and President Phil Harrison stated in an interview with MCV, the trade newspaper, that the company increasingly favours online titles over the traditional retail model lending further weight to PEGI’s cause.