40°

IGN: APB Retail Impressions

After about five years in development, APB, from Scotland-based developer Realtime Worlds, finally launched today in North America, although those who pre-ordered have had access to the game's servers since Saturday. That said, the impact of a three-day head start has been minimized by the fact that over those three days, players have only been able to spend ten hours accumulatively in the game's two main districts.

T9X695463d ago

I really hope they end up making this for consoles, because this game looks sick as hell.

lzim5463d ago

if they make enough money RTW can get back to non-mmos.

10°

Why MMO Games Fail - DevilsMMO

From DevilsMMO:

'It occurs to me that the MMO, as it currently stands in the industry, is something of a hit and miss affair. The average gamer, equipped with a console and every shooter ever made, generally only ever hears about the very biggest MMOs or, failing that, the MMOs that manage to crash and burn the hardest.

This was brought back home to me last week when I received a comment on one of my articles in which the commenter believed most MMOs are destined to fail, and fail quickly. Rather than take that statement at face value, I’ve been thinking through why that would be; what makes a game that has had thousands of hours of development hours plugged into it just fail?'

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devilsmmo.com
20°

One Year On: Remembering Realtime Worlds, Scotland's Next Big Videogame Success Story

Scotland-based developers Realtime Worlds created the critically acclaimed Xbox 360 title, Crackdown. They seemed to have a bright future ahead. Unfortunately, that was not to be the case...

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eggsayswhut.com
10°

Splitkick - Demo Dilemma

Splitkick: “What the hell happened?” That was my basic sentiment after playing about two hours of Brink on my PS3. I left PAX East 2011 proclaiming Brink my “game of the show” after playing a hands-on demo, and was hotly anticipating its retail release. So about nine weeks, and thirty bad reviews later, I was left wondering how something that seemed so promising in the recent past could now be such a sub-par product.

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splitkick.com