Christopher Buffa (Prima Games): Kyrat is your new playground in Ubisoft’s Far Cry 4, a gorgeous first person adventure with cool vehicles, lots of guns and dangerous animals, from rampaging elephants to maneating tigers. There’s plenty to see and do while making your way through the Himalayas. In fact, the game contains a huge number of collectibles to track down, chief among them 150 different Propaganda Posters put up by the villainous Pagan Min.
While the posters are pretty to look at, it’s your job to tear them all down. It’s as simple as walking up to one and pressing a button, though hard to reach posters require a different means to destroy in the form of fire. Having trouble grabbing a poster? Switch to a fire-based weapon - a fire arrow, Molatov cocktail, flare or flamethrower will do the trick - and burn baby burn!
It’ll take hours to find all of the Propaganda Posters. That is, unless you use our helpful guide. Don’t worry. Min won’t even know they’re gone.
Update: Ubisoft has acknowledged that the Japanese version of the game, which includes regional censorship, was mistakenly released globally. The company says it has reverted these changes in the game's worldwide branch.
Ubisoft has quietly removed nudity from Far Cry 4 in a recent update, sparking speculation about Tencent’s growing influence on the publisher.
You can murder, mame, and viciously attack people, but anything that deals with showing a body in a natural state whether for titillation or narrative, is some truly terrible thing. We are so weird with our puritan thought process. Feed our bloodlust and fuel our enjoyment for entertainment of simulating acts of harm and murder, but god forbid you see digitized TnA. It will never make sense to me.
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
India is a culturally rich and beautiful land which is a perfect setting for a video game. Here are some of the best games set in India.