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Originally Posted by wraggster When we woke up this morning, we weren't expecting to round out our day with the visceral image of man-sized teddy bears hanging by nooses from a ceiling. This latest trailer for Naughty Bear: Panic in Paradise shows off the eponymous bear's new combo-based combat system, range-based enemy AI, and Naughty's ability to pick up bears and stick their tongues into the spinning blade of a rotary lawnmower. ...
Originally Posted by wraggster When Capcom first ripped the lid off the Devil May Cry series reboot, dubbedDmC: Devil May Cry, fans were angry with developer Ninja Theory's direction – specifically, Dante's new look and surroundings. Capcom US Producer Alex Jones understands this initial concern, but believes outrage is dissipating. "There was always going to be people who saw new Dante and ...
Originally Posted by wraggster As made evident by the latest trailer above, Primal Carnage continues to embody the bloody fantasies of 10-year-olds everywhere who want to be real, live dinosaurs when they grow up. This look at the game's humans vs. dinosaurs multiplayer combat highlights two of the playable classes that will be available when the game eventually launches: Velociraptors and Trappers. As you might guess, Velociraptor gameplay involves a lot of running, climbing and pouncing on squishy humans and their ...
Originally Posted by wraggster The new Counter-Strike: Global Offensive has a few old Counter-Strike maps included, and that's just fine, given that it's all in the same franchise. But Webzen's free-to-play shooter Arctic Combat has apparently taken some inspiration from Valve's classic as well. PC Gamer notes in the video above that the "Sand Storm" map, included with the game, bears a striking similarity to de_dust2, a map that any CS player will immediately recognize. As PC Gamer says, ...
Originally Posted by wraggster A Holy Grail of Linux gaming has been an Unreal Engine 3 port. Getting one for the OS would unlock a world of games that has been the province of, well, just about any other mainstream platform. Thanks to Google preserving Flash on Linux through Chrome, that dream is alive in at least a rudimentary form. Experimenters at the Phoronix forums have found that Chrome 21 has support for the Stage ...