DarkZero writes: "The first Saints Row received generally positive reviews and sold over 2 million copies on the Xbox 360 following its release in August 2006. This popularity guaranteed a sequel, which is going multi-platform on Xbox 360, PS3 and PC on the 17th of October.
DarkZero was in attendance at Volition's press event in sunny Prague where we got the chance to go hands-on with both Playstation 3 and Xbox 360 versions of the game. We got some extensive play-time on both the singleplayer and co-op modes and you can read our thoughts on these below. We also had an exclusive first-look and tryout of the multiplayer, but we can't reveal details on that until closer to the game's release, so check back near the end of the month."
The 2000s was a great decade for a lot of brilliant video games. Here are the ten best games of the 2000s that you may not have played.
You know usually when someone says "you may have missed" it's games that were lesser known, hidden gems, underrated games. These are all super high profile games that sold extremely well.
What is this list? These are all hugely popular games. I was expecting games like Dark Messiah of Might & Magic, Advent Rising, Arx Fatalis, etc.
I've only played 3 on that list. Part of me feels bad about how little I used all the consoles I've owned as a kid. One bright side is, there's over 30 years of games to experience for the first time.
News Wire - "Today, we’re excited to reveal Games with Gold for July! On Xbox One, command your rally car to victory in extreme conditions in WRC 8 FIA World Rally Championship and rule the court with high-flying dunks and confidence-smashing rejections in Dunk Lords."
Dunk Lords has a sort of NBA Jam vibe to it so that might be fun. I like rally racers but much prefer the Sega type (arcade style) over the more realistic ones. So that may be a pass. I already have SR2 on disc so I dont need that one. Juju looks cute in a DKC/Rayman sort of way so that might be worth a try. Overall though... its pretty bland month.
Plenty of games seem guaranteed to get sequels. But sometimes, companies surprise people and give them the additional installments they didn't know they needed.
Baller