Quantcast
Category Archive 'Games'
17.03.09

iAM Interactive launches racing game

- Games, Online -

GAME publisher iAM Interactive unveiled its second casual game for this year, a racing game called GoGoRacer [spelled as is], developed by China-based firm Radiance Digital Entertainment.

GoGoRacer would be the third online racing game in the Philippines, after Crazy Kart from Level Up! Philippines and IP e-Games’ Top Speed.

The game is similar to the Nintendo Mario Kart series where players try to outrun competitors while using various weapons to overtake them.

iAM Product Manager John Paul Pelayo said in an interview that the game would be distributed in Singapore, Malaysia and the Philippines, allowing players from these countries to compete against each other.

[Read the rest of this entry »]

11.03.09

Defectors featured in Cuban baseball video game

- Games -

Agence France-Presse

HAVANA–Havana on Tuesday debuted a baseball video game which includes famous Cuban-born defectors long expunged from official memory here after they abandoned the Communist island to play in the United States.

The country’s first baseball video game, MVP Cuba 1.0, features a number of Cuban stars who triumphed in the US major leagues, including star pitchers Orlando Hernandez — nicknamed “El Duque” — and Jose Contreras.

The game was unveiled at a state information science center over the weekend, according to Juventud Rebelde daily newspaper.

Livan Hernandez and Kendry Morales also figure in the game, as does Yadel Marti, who defected from the Caribbean island last December to pursue a professional baseball career in the United States.

[Read the rest of this entry »]

08.03.09

The Beatles will soon be playable

- Entertainment (general), Games, Music & Games -

By Clarence Yu
Contributor

The band that John Lennon once described as more famous than Jesus Christ (or he was quoted as saying by media) will soon be available as a video game as The Beatles: Rock Band.

According to this article from the Rolling Stone website, the game will be available for play on Xbox, Nintendo Wii and Playstation 3 and will be released on September 9, 2009.

Developed by Harmonix Music Systems and published by MTV Games, Rock Band is a popular music video game that allows players to play as a band unit — guitars, bass and drums, unlike the rival Guitar Hero game series by Activision (until the recent release of Guitar Hero World Tour) which only allowed players to interface with the game as a guitar player.

This will be the first Rock Band video game devoted solely to a band, and will reportedly cover material from the Beatles’ first album, Please Please Me, to their final album, Abbey Road.

This development continues the trend of artists who are diversifying their channels of distribution through the gaming industry. Previous artists who have done so include Aerosmith and Metallica (through the Guitar Hero franchise).

One can have mixed feelings about this kind of medium being used by artists to enhance their popularity and sales. For one thing, it certainly is proven to work well for big-name artists. With Guitar Hero: Aerosmith, the band garnered more sales from the game than from any individual album they recorded. It also worked to boost their catalog sales by giving gamers an increased awareness of the band’s past music.

While this is a great way to learn about an artist’s music, it might not be the best way to learn an instrument. For example, given the big differences between the game guitar controller and an actual guitar, it might be easier for a gamer just to play the video game. But as a form of expression and creativity, the game might be utterly useless. The only good thing that can be seen at the moment about this from a musical standpoint is that it might spark the interest of gamers into picking up an actual instrument.

The Beatles certainly do not need the money or the added popularity. Hopefully, one can only imagine that they are getting into this project to incite more interest in the art of writing and creating music, which would then lead to a boost in more bands and more recorded music. Just like the Beatles’ appearance on The Ed Sullivan Show, which launched thousands of bands and inspired even more kids at the time to pick up an instrument, one can only hope that a similar revolution will occur with the game’s release.

In the meantime, it would be interesting to see the kind of reaction this game will elicit from hard-core Beatles fans, gamers, and music industry insiders, and how much Apple Corps Ltd. (the Beatles-owned record label) would stand to gain from a business standpoint, and how other legendary bands would react. Rock Band: The Rolling Stones, anyone?

25.02.09

Z-Zone to launch Oversoul

- Announcements, Games -

Online gaming publisher Z-Zone will be launching OverSoul: Courage for Supremecy.

OverSoul will only be the second game that Z-Zone will be introducing in the country. It previously introducd SkyBlade: Sword of the Heavens in 2006.

The game will be launched on March 7 at the SM Mall of Asia in Pasay City.

The company has already opened a portal where interested players can download the game client as part of the beta testing, which started in late 2008.

OverSoul will also be a 3D massively multiplayer online role playing game (MMORPG) similar to SkyBlade. The medieval fantasy story is focused on the battle of two tribes, the Drakhans and the Tantheons.

Each tribe would have four character types: the sword-wielding Warrior, the balanced Guardian, the magical Necromancer, and the summoner Wizard.

13.02.09

Amazon yanks Japanese rape video game

- Games, Gaming Scene -

Agence France-Presse

SAN FRANCISCO–Online retail giant Amazon has yanked from its virtual shelves a Japanese computer game that lets players simulate raping girls.

A “Rapelay” videogame being hawked on Amazon by a third-party merchant was deemed inappropriate and the product’s page taken down after it was brought to the California Internet firm’s attention Wednesday night.

“We determined that we did not want to be selling this particular item,” Amazon spokeswoman Patty Smith said of the computer game.

The “Rapelay” game was created exclusively for the Japanese market but a couple of “like new” copies were being offered on Amazon by a US seller specializing in animated Japanese pornography.

[Read the rest of this entry »]

Welcome to
hackenslash, the gaming site of INQUIRER.net. Manila-based INQUIRER.net is the online home of the Philippine Daily Inquirer group of publications.
INQUIRER.net VDO

hackenslash: the podcast PupuPlayer FREE

Search

Archives
You are browsing
the Archives of hackenslash in the 'Games' Category.
Categories