Join Hardlydan and Amras89 for game talk and fun! This time, The Gamesmen talk about Microsoft’s digital gifting, Shadow of the Tomb Raider, Deus Ex, Video games as a historical research tool, video game stealers, and murdering pitchers. Games discussed are Monster Hunter World, Tom Clancy’s Ghost Recon Wildlands, PC Building Simulator, Far Cry 5, Wolfenstein II: The New Colossus, Mini Ninjas, Marvel Puzzle Quest, PlayerUnknown’s Battlegrounds, Assassin’s Creed Origins, and Xenoblade Chronicles 2.
VGChartz's Mark Nielsen: "While it was a mixed pleasure overall - at times exhilarating, at others agonizing - I would have to say I enjoyed my time with Monster Hunter: World and found it to be surprisingly addicting. It wouldn’t be wrong to say that I was surprised by how little had changed from previous titles, given how this particular entry took the series to unheard levels of popularity, but while it retains both positives and negatives from them, at the very least it’s a stellar-looking game that brings more freedom to the hunt than any of its predecessors (Monster Hunter Rise could possibly be a different story, but that, my friends, is a game for another article)."
Far Cry debuted on March 23, 2004, meaning that next week, it will have been 20 years since Jack Carver first washed up on the shore of a tropical paradise teeming with hostile mercenaries.
I'd love a far cry pack with the original PC game (not the half assed port on ps360) instincts, predator even a port of far cry 2 to modern consoles back when these games had their own identity and weren't far cry 3 cut and pastel
Capcom Co., Ltd. (Capcom) today announced that Monster Hunter: World has sold over 25 million units* worldwide.