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This is a site dedicated to bring you people our own personal opinions of how we feel about the games we have played. You can get a better understanding of how the game is like before you try it out yourself or you can just read for leisure!
We do hope that these articles would be of help to you.
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MCF: Dire Grove

A group of graduate students have gone missing in a town, Dire Grove, whereby a Celtic legend has been passed down from generations to generations for centuries. It has been told as a fairy tale to scare young kids.
However, is it really just a fairy tale, or a true legend? If it's not real, then what are the students?
Play the game to uncover the mystery now!
Go HERE to read the review.
Go HERE to download the free trial from official website

Dire Grove

Scribblenauts

A DS console game.
Control the cute little character around, creating different objects to aid him in solving in each level.
Aim of the game is to go through every level and get the star light thing. It seems easy but it's getting more and more challenging towards the end.
Think you have a wide vocabulary? You can try this game now yourself!
You can read our review HERE!
Click HERE to try for your own!

Scribblenauts

iSketch

Online Pictionary!
Challenge your friends today with this fun-filled game.
Click HERE to play!
Click HERE to read our review!

iSketch

Japan's video game visionary: the console is dying

Posted by Mooyalty Monday, April 12, 2010
TOKYO - HIDEO Kojima, one of the world's most famous video game creators, sees a future for digital entertainment outside the box - outside any box.

Kojima, whose 'Metal Gear Solid' games have sold more than 27 million copies, says the future of video gaming is on networks that will free players from consoles supplied by the likes of his long-time partner Sony Corp.

'In the near future, we'll have games that don't depend on any platform,' Kojima said at a news conference announcing the latest installment in a game saga that began in 1987.

'Gamers should be able to take the experience with them in their living rooms, on the go, when they travel - wherever they are and whenever they want to play. It should be the same software and the same experience,' he said.

Kojima was speaking at an event in Tokyo to detail plans for the late April launch of 'Metal Gear Solid: Peace Walker,' a video game he developed and directed and Konami Corp is launching for Sony's portable PSP device.

The prediction of a future without game machines from a figure regarded as both creative maverick and commercial dynamo appeared to rattle a Sony executive on hand for the event.
'It's a bold prediction,' Sony Computer Entertainment Japan President Hiroshi Kawano told reporters with a nervous smile.

'We hope he continues to develop for platforms, but we deeply respect his sense of taking on a challenge.'
'Metal Gear Solid: Peace Walker' goes on sale in Japan at the end of April and the United States and Europe in June.

Kojima, 46, is known for sneaking pacifist themes into a game series that features stealth combat and elaborate plot lines that often reflect on the dangers of technology.

The latest installment features Metal Gear's mercenary hero, Snake, as he and a group of soldiers of fortune set off to save Costa Rica from invasion in 1974 by a mysterious army.

Kojima said players are rewarded for cooperating and encouraged to stun and capture - not kill - enemy soldiers they encounter in order to put them to work.

'This is software that develops management skills,' Kojima said. 'You can even fire workers, something that you can't really do in real life. In the game, I couldn't stop doing it.'

Kojima has said he hopes to develop movies as well as video games. Like recent Hollywood productions, his latest game is packed with product placements to bring in additional revenue, including AXE bodywash from Unilever and Doritos corn chips and Mountain Dew from PepsiCo.

Kojima said he hoped the release of the new game on Sony's PSP device would give his development team a sense of what works in portable gaming in preparation for his vision of gaming on demand over the Internet.
'I looked at this in part as an experiment aimed at the future,' he said. -- REUTERS

News taken from http://www.straitstimes.com/SME%2BSpotlight/Lifestyle/Story/STIStory_512924.html

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