Kotaku - I'm tired of Aliens and Star Wars references in video games. But references to HBO's great drama The Wire? I'll take more. Above, a scene from the interesting upcoming game Watch Dogs, which enables you to hack into—and see through—security cameras in a modern Chicago.
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With the world of information and technology, privacy and security growing every day, Watch Dogs deserves another chance in the spotlight, now more than ever.
The only Ubi title that deserves a faithful remake right now is Splinter Cell 1.
All 2014+ Ubi titles are just underwhelming. Especially ones from 2016+ are just cancer.
The fist watchdog game was the best by far
After that they weren't weird and annoying with that hipster stuff. Aiden was a badass.
From VG247: "When cars slide, they leave tyre marks. In a game like Driver, they’re an aesthetic touch, part of the inherent cool of a handbrake turn. But those dark shadows in the road also tell a story. From tyre marks, you can determine the speed of a vehicle, when it started to skid, and its ultimate direction of travel – long after the car itself has vanished into the distance."
Why did they stop making some of the best games ever? Driver was one of them.
A story driven game with pure driving gameplay. I'd love to see a new Driver game or a remake of the first one.
Another ridiculous Kotaku article. Let yourself be enlightened by this fine blog article I stumbled upon a few minutes ago: http://n4g.com/user/blogpos...
Everyone needs to know how to vote this garbage down. Click the "kotaku.com +" link below the "Watch video >>" link and click "WTF?" for "Story Quality" and "No" for "Like This Website?"
Although I thought of The Wire too when I saw that sequence. But still that article was poorly written and it's not really a news piece.
I don't get it. It's a legit reference, and those of us that were fans of The Wire will enjoy the article. I know Kotaku generally sucks a fat one, but why the hate for this?