WorthPlaying writes: "Last year, the gaming world was introduced to Matt Hazard, a new video game character who was meant to be a clichéd mixture of old 1980s and '90s action heroes from film and TV. His game, Eat Lead: The Return of Matt Hazard, was a parody of gaming stereotypes that the industry has seen in its short 30-year history. The game referenced and made fun of anything possible, from game tutorials to early first-person shooters to Japanese RPGs to the industry itself. Most gamers and critics appreciated the humor and high production values, but few felt that the gameplay matched the developer's ambitions to make a funny but fun triple-A third-person shooter. Fast-forward to less than a year later, and we now have the second game from the fictional video game character. Matt Hazard: Blood Bath and Beyond arrives in both a different genre and a different medium than before. In a way, this is probably for the best, as the sequel makes for a better overall game."
Carlos writes - "Whether the idea of dusting off that library of Xbox 360 games for a spin once more is for you or not, the fact that there are now almost 400 titles available to play through backwards compatibility is certainly impressive. Nevertheless, for many gamers, more is better and now we see five new titles made playable on Xbox One.
But are they worth heading back to once more, or should we stick with the abundance of new titles gracing the Xbox Store in recent weeks."
So extremely happy about ilomilo finally being backward compatible. Absolutely LOVE that game.
RunDLC posted an article listing the Xbox Live Arcade games that take up the most hard drive space. Games include Shadow Complex and Madden NFL Arcade.
All Age Gaming's Daniel Emmerson takes a look at Matt Hazard's new foray on to the Xbox Live Arcade in Matt Hazard: Blood Bath and Beyond. Does this title stand up well against some of the other great offerings on the Xbox Live Arcade?