Crysis

Update: The original report was misleading - Crysis from Xbox Live Games on Demand does not require an always-on internet connection to play.

The lock-out timer described below only appears when playing Crysis on a second Xbox 360 console - a different machine than the one it was originally downloaded to. If the connection to the Live account drops, you'll need to recover the Gamertag within 10 minutes to resume gameplay.

Original, erroneous, story: You cannot play Crysis, bought from Xbox Games on Demand, offline.


The moment your connection drops, a 10-minute timer appears. That's the window you have to reconnect. Fail to do so and you're dumped back to the dashboard, reported MS Xbox World.


Presumably a similar always-on internet requirement will be present in the PSN version of Crysis, available today.


Crysis costs 1600 Microsoft Points on Xbox Games on Demand or £15.99 on PS3.

Video:

Portal 2 E3 Demo (Repulsion Gel)


PC shooter Crysis fires onto the PlayStation Store this week. It's a polished port of the original's single-player campaign, available for £15.99.


Arcade slamdunker NBA Jam: On Fire Edition also courts your wallet this week, while new and free Portal 2 DLC continues the adventures of co-op robots P-Body and and Atlus in a new two-player test track.


There's still no sign of Mortal Kombat: Arcade Kollection - now over a month late - and Castlevania: Harmony of Despair, expected last week.


Co-op shooter Payday: The Heist is also missing after Sony issued a last-minute delay yesterday. Citing extra time was needed to ensure "overall game quality", Payday will now come later in the month.


Here's the full list, courtesy of the PlayStation Blog:

Special Offer:

  • Borderlands - Game Of The Year edition (Was £27.99/€34.99 - Now £11.99/€14.99). Offer ends on 12th October 2011.

Trial & Unlock (PS3)

  • Eufloria (£7.99/€9.99)
  • NBA Jam: On Fire Edition (£9.99/€12.99)

Full Games (PS3)

  • Ape Escape (£19.99/€24.99)
  • Crysis (£15.99/€19.99)
  • De Blob 2 (£19.99/€24.99)
  • Homefront (£27.99/€34.99)
  • Saints Row 2 (£15.99/€19.99)
  • Sega Bass Fishing MOVE Edition (£6.29/€7.99)
  • Space Channel 5 - Part 2 (£6.29/€7.99)
  • Shift 2 Unleashed (£23.99/€29.99)
  • Tiger Woods PGA Tour 12 Masters Edition (£57.99/€69.99)

minis (PS3 and PSP)

  • The Marbians (£3.49/€3.99)
  • 5 In 1 Solitaire (£2.49/€2.99)
  • Street Smart (£1.99/€2.49)

PSone (PS3/PSP)

  • Arc The Lad (£3.99/€4.99)
  • Arcade Hits: Sonic Wings (£3.99/€4.99)
  • Cho Aniki (£3.99/€4.99)
  • Gex 3D: Enter The Gecko (£4.79/€5.99)

Add-On Game Content (PS3)

  • Ace Combat Assault Horizon - F-15C Death Rider (free)
  • Agarest: Generations Of War Zero: Subordinate's Present Pack (free); Extra Dungeon 2 (free); Extra Dungeon 1 (free); Dream Oracle Pack (free); Point Addition Pack 1 (free); Point Addition Pack 2 (free); Fallen Angel Pack (free); Healing Hand Pack (free); Healing and Defence Pack (free); Legendary Goods Pack (free); Logistic Support Pack 1 (free); Rear-Echelon Support Pack 1 (free); Noble Person Pack (free); Shrivelled Chicken Pack (free); Impregnable Defences Pack 1 (free); Status Boost Pack (free); Status Boost Pack 2 (free); Zero Starter Pack (free); Impregnable Defences Pack 2 (free)
  • Atelier Totori: Atelier Totori: Additional Party: Ceci (£2.39/€2.99); Atelier Totori: Additional Party: Iksel & Cordelia (£2.39/€2.99); Atelier Totori: Bgm Mode (free); Atelier Totori: Bgm Pack: Atelier Pack (£2.39/€2.99); Atelier Totori: Bgm Pack: Battle Pack #1 (£2.39/€2.99); Atelier Totori: Bgm Pack: Battle Pack #2 (£2.39/€2.99); Atelier Totori: Bgm Pack: Battle Pack #3 (£2.39/€2.99); Atelier Totori: Bgm Pack: Battle Pack #4 (£2.39/€2.99); Atelier Totori: Model View Mode (free)
  • Champion Jockey: G1 Jockey & Gallop Racer - Music Pack 3: Sound Director's selection (£0.95/€1.19)
  • Dead Rising 2: Off the Record - Free Support Pack (free)
  • Elemental Monster - Booster Box -The Legend Begins (£4.79/€5.99)
  • Eyepet - Lucky Dip Rain 2 (free)
  • Magic: The Gathering - Duels of the Planeswalkers 2012: Auramancer Deck Unlock (£0.79/€0.99); Cloudburst Deck Unlock (£0.79/€0.99); Grave Whispers Deck Unlock (£0.79/€0.99); Foil Auramancer Deck (£0.79/€0.99); Foil Cloudburst Deck (£0.79/€0.99); Foil Grave Whispers Deck (£0.79/€0.99)
  • ModNation Racers - Oil Stain Mod & Kart (£1.39/€1.79)
  • NBA Jam: On Fire Edition - Time Is Money Pack (£2.39/€2.99)
  • Portal 2 - Peer Review (free)
  • Rock Band Network: Bagatelle No. 25 - Für Elise (Beethoven) - Thomas Walker (£0.59/€0.79); Farewell, Mona Lisa - The Dillinger Escape (£0.99/€1.49); Glow - Alien Ant Farm (£0.99/€1.49); Heroes Don't Cry - Free Spirit (£0.99/€1.49)
  • Rock Band 3: Limp Bizkit Pack 01 (£3.49/€5.29) (contains the following songs also available separately) - Gold Cobra - Limp Bizkit (£0.99/€1.49); My Way - Limp Bizkit (£0.99/€1.49); Nookie - Limp Bizkit (£0.99/€1.49); Re-Arranged - Limp Bizkit (£0.99/€1.49)
  • Spiderman: Edge of Time - Identity Crisis Costume Pack (free)

Themes (PS3)

  • Abstract: Flying Tiger Themes - Tokyo Shrine (£1.19/€1.49)

Dynamic Themes (PS3)

  • Abstract: 3D Circuits Theme 2 (£1.59/€1.99); Bridge At Night Theme (£1.59/€1.99); Colored Ink (£1.59/€1.99); Iron Shield Theme (£1.59/€1.99); Lynx Excite Theme (free); Ying Temple Theme (£1.59/€1.99)
  • Nature: Silent Lake Theme (£1.59/€1.99); Sunrise Theme (£1.59/€1.99)
  • Seasonal: A Murder Of Crows (£1.59/€1.99)

Wallpapers (PS3)

  • At The Ready Wallpaper (free)
  • The Baconing Wallpaper (free)

Videos (PS3)

  • Access Episode 003
  • Aliens Colonial Marines Gameplay Trailer
  • El Shaddai Trailer
  • Fifa 12 Gc Trailer
  • PAYDAY The Heist: Green Bridge Trailer
  • Rubgy Wc 2011 Launch Trailer
  • The Sims 3 Pets Trailer 1
  • Yakuza: Dead Souls Confirmed
Crysis


Some PlayStation 3 owners are reporting that the PlayStation Network is currently down.


Gamers are receiving error code 80710092 when trying to sign in to the online service.


Sony has announced it is aware of the problem and is on the case.


Fingers crossed PSN sorts itself out sooner rather than later. In Europe, Crysis, NBA Jam On Fire Edition, Eufloria and Portal 2 DLC are all scheduled to launch on PSN today.

Crysis

Today, Crytek's landmark 2007 PC game Crysis was re-released as a downloadable game for both Xbox 360 and PS3. I've already had a chance to play the game and really liked it, in particular its improved controls, strong visuals, and directly-translated open gameplay. It's a strong port of a good game.


Now I've got my own copy, I thought I'd put together a video of some highlights from the first half-hour to give a sense of what the game is all about.


The Crysis re-release is single-player only, but that's okay—it has a chunky campaign that features a lot of variety both in terms of locations and enemies, and it does a great job of imparting the thrill of the hunt. Playing it again, I realized that as much as I enjoyed Crysis 2, I miss the larger, more open battlefields of the first game.


Crysis can be downloaded on either console for $19.99, and if you've got the scratch to spare or are looking for a less expensive, more tropical counterpoint to the just-released Rage, I recommend giving it a go.



You can contact Kirk Hamilton, the author of this post, at kirk@kotaku.com. You can also find him on Twitter, Facebook, and lurking around our #tips page.
Crysis

Crysis, NBA Jam, God Hand and Eufloria Are New on the PlayStation StoreIt's true. You can finally download PlayStation 2 classic God Hand to your PlayStation 3, people. That's the wonderfully wacky beat 'em up from the people who made Okami. IGN labeled it awful, while Kotaku contributor Tim Rogers likened it to "being a professional chainsaw-wielding glacier demolisher at a party where the penguins are going to need a lot of ice cubes."


If polarizing PS2 games aren't your thing—though at just ten bucks a pop, those emulated last-gen games are certainly worth experimenting with—there's much more on tap in this week's North American PlayStation Store update. NBA Jam On Fire Edition, the original Crysis and the lovely looking Eufloria, for example.


But if "new" video games aren't your cup of tea, Sega Bass Fishing, Odin Sphere and Resident Evil 5 Gold Edition are also recent adds to the PlayStation Store. See the full list of new PlayStation 3 and PSP games in the very long list below.


Games & Demos for PlayStation 3

Resident Evil 5 Gold Edition ($29.99)
Crysis ($19.99)
NBA Jam On Fire Edition ($14.99)
Shift 2 Unleashed Digital ($39.99)
Eufloria ($9.99)
Sega Bass Fishing ($9.99)
Space Channel 5 Part 2 ($9.99)
Eufloria Demo
Pro Evolution Soccer 2012 Demo
PSone Classics - Chrono Trigger ($9.99)
PS2 Classics - Odin Sphere ($9.99)
PS2 Classics - Maximo: Ghosts To Glory ($9.99)
PS2 Classics - Grim Grimoire ($9.99)
PS2 Classics - Ring of Red ($9.99)
PS2 Classics - God Hand ($9.99)


Games & Demos for PSP

FIFA 12 ($39.99)


Add-ons & Expansions

Portal 2: Peer Review (free)
Rage – Wasteland Sewer Missions ($9.99)
Dead Rising 2: Off The Record Free Support Pack (free)
Street Fighter III: Third Strike Online Edition Match Pack 1 (Fight For The Future) ($3.99)
NBA Jam On Fire Edition – Time Is Money Pack ($4.99)
Magic The Gathering: Duels Of The Planeswalkers 2012: Foil Conversion "Auramancer" ($0.99)
Magic The Gathering: Duels Of The Planeswalkers 2012: Foil Conversion "Cloudburst" ($0.99)
Magic The Gathering: Duels Of The Planeswalkers 2012: Foil Conversion "Grave Whispers" ($0.99)
Magic The Gathering: Duels Of The Planeswalkers 2012: Full Deck "Auramancer" ($0.99)
Magic The Gathering: Duels Of The Planeswalkers 2012: Full Deck "Cloudburst" ($0.99)
Magic The Gathering: Duels Of The Planeswalkers 2012: Full Deck "Grave Whispers" ($0.99)
Cabela's Big Game Hunter 2012: Alaskan Rocks (free)
Cabela's Big Game Hunter 2012: Chile Plateau (free)
Cabela's Big Game Hunter 2012: Texas Woods (free)


Rock Band 3 tracks


  • "Gold Cobra" – Limp Bizkit ($1.99)
  • "My Way" – Limp Bizkit ($1.99)
  • "Nookie" – Limp Bizkit ($1.99)
  • "Re-Arranged" – Limp Bizkit ($1.99)
  • Limp Bizkit Pack 01 ($5.49) – "Gold Cobra," "My Way," "Nookie," and "Re-Arranged" by Limp Bizkit.

Rock Band Network tracks


  • "Bagatelle No. 25 – Fur Elise (Beethoven)" – Thomas Walker ($0.99)
  • "Farewell, Mona Lisa" – The Dillinger ($1.99)
  • "Glow" – Alien Ant Farm ($1.99)
  • "Heroes Don't Cry" – Free Spirit ($1.99)
  • "Pendulum" – After the Burial ($1.99)
  • "Ship With No Sails" – Neonfly ($1.99)
  • "Stabbing The Drama" – Soilwork ($1.99)
  • "The Window" – Raven Quinn ($1.99)
  • "These City Lights" – Rose of Jericho ($0.99)
  • "Trying Hard" – Loni Rose ($0.99)

Game Videos

Qore 10/4 Edition
NBA 2K12 – Momentous Trailer
NBA 2K12: 3D Trailer
Kingdoms Of Amalur: Reckoning Gamescom Trailer
Need For Speed The Run – Porsche Reveal Trailer
House Of The Dead: Overkill Gameplay Trailer #1
Final Fantasy XIII-2 2011 TGS Trailer
Jurassic Park: The Game – Action Montage Trailer
Metro: Last Light – E3 Gameplay Trailer
Metro: Last Light – Teaser Trailer
Saints Row The Third – Killbane: The Walking Apocalypse Trailer
Twisted Metal Vengeance Trailer
Resistance 3 "Follow Capelli" Trailer
Resistance 3 "No Mercy" Trailer
Resistance 3 "Radio" TV Spot
GT Academy Behind the Scenes – Helicopter Cam
GT Academy Behind the Scenes – Rally Course


Themes, Wallpapers & Avatars

Rochard Skyrig Theme (free)
Rochard Theme (free)
Rage Wellspring Dynamic Theme ($2.99)
Rage Premium Theme ($1.99)
A Murder of Crows Dynamic Theme ($2.99)
Amphibian Delight Dynamic Theme ($2.99)
Bombshelter Blues Dynamic Theme ($2.99)
Flirty Girl Dynamic Theme ($2.99)
Xuriga Static Theme ($1.49)
Tatsuka Static Theme ($1.49)
Misti Dawn Playtime Static Theme ($1.49)
4 Elements Hd: Wallpaper 2
Rochard – John Rochard Wallpaper
Rochard Wallpaper
Lost Planet 2 Avatars (x20) ($0.49)
Rocket Knight Avatar Collection 2 ($2.99)
Red Faction Armageddon Avatar Bundle ($0.99)


Sales, Price Drops & Bundles

Explodemon! – Sale (PS3) (now $6.99, original price $9.99)
Tales From Space: About A Blob – Sale (PS3) (now $5.99, original price $14.99)
Enigmo – Sale (PS3) (now $1.99, original price $3.99)
Jane's Hotel – Sale (PS3) (now $1.99, original price $3.99)
Zombie Tycoon – Sale (PS3) (now $2.99, original price $4.99)
Zombie Tycoon French – Sale (PS3) (now $2.99, original price $4.99)
Stardrone – End Sale (PS3) (now $7.99, original price $4.99)
Bulletstorm – Digital Download – Price Change (PS3) (now $29.99, original price $39.99)


PlayStation Plus

Costume Quest (free)
Elemental Monster (free)
PSP minis - 1000 Tiny Claws (free)
PSP minis - Speedball 2 (free)
PSP minis - Street Smarts (free)
PSone Classics - Warhawk (free)
Resident Evil 5 full game trial
Shift 2 Unleashed full game trial
Eufloria – 20% off
Explodemon! – 30% off
Tales From Space: About a Blob – 40% off
Resident Evil 5 Gold Edition – 25% off
Elemental Monster Online Card Game Booster Box DLC – 50% off
Lost Planet 2 Avatar Bundle (free)



You can contact Michael McWhertor, the author of this post, at mike@kotaku.com. You can also find him on Twitter, Facebook, and lurking around our #tips page.
Crysis


Crysis launches on PlayStation Network and Xbox Live on 4th October, EA has revealed.


That's a Tuesday, so for Europeans, the game will release on PSN a day later, on Wednesday, 5th October.


The game costs £15.99 or 1600 Microsoft Points.


Publisher EA has described the console download as a "modified and enhanced" version of the single-player campaign from 2007 game Crysis 1. It also features optimized Nanosuit controls, fine-tuned combat and full stereoscopic 3D support, all powered by CryEngine 3.


Eurogamer's Crysis review shot a 9/10. "This is a game that feels supremely engineered, like a precision machine, or a German automobile," Jim Rossignol wrote.

Video: Crysis 1 on console.

Crysis

Crysis Doesn't Just Run On Consoles, It SoarsThe original 2007 Crysis has a benchmark-y quality to it. It is no longer the Best-Looking PC Game In The World, but it retains some of that "must-have" mystique nonetheless. Perhaps it's because it's one of only a few hardcore first-person shooters that has never been ported to consoles. But every time one of my console-playing friends builds a new gaming PC, first thing he or she does is go straight to Steam and download the game.


Well, it's a PC exclusive no longer. Crytek and EA have announced a coming downloadable version of Crysis for Xbox 360 and PS3, which will use the updated CryEngine 3 that powered this year's Crysis 2. Earlier this week I had a chance to play it on Xbox 360, and I was so impressed that one of my first questions was, somewhat unbelievably: "Is this being ported to PC?"


Sadly, the answer was "No." I took a moment to reflect on the question I'd just asked: "Will I be able to play a PC port of your console port of a PC game?" Dogs and cats! Living together!


Crysis Doesn't Just Run On Consoles, It SoarsSo here's the part where I commit heresy and say that yes, I rather like using an Xbox 360 controller with my PC. Blah blah, PC Master Race, superiority and precision of the mouse and keyboard, blah. I love precision as much as the next guy, and I play a good number of games with a mouse and keyboard (including the original Crysis). But I also like to kick back with a controller in my hand and relax, and I even like controller-rumble! It feels good on m'hands. Furthermore, I've recently taken to moving my PC over to my giant HDTV and running my games on the big screen, (you should see The Witcher 2 running on a 55-inch display, good god), and at the moment, I'm unable to play mouse/keyboard games while sitting in front of my television.


This is all a disclaimer-filled preamble to where I talk about how I played Crysis 2 on PC with a 360 controller. It worked great, and as I've mentioned before, I liked that game more than a little bit. I played a ton of Crysis with a mouse and keyboard, partly because the way that the game mapped to a 360 controller never felt right (and couldn't be customized, boo). The crouch didn't stick, the iron-sights did… and iron-sights were assigned to RB? Left trigger brought up the suit menu, but there was no one-button way to toggle between the suit's abilities. And worst of all, there was no way to go prone when using a controller… none. You had to use the keyboard. It was all a bit of a mess, particularly when compared to the intuitive controller-mapping in Crysis 2.


So when I sat down alongside Crytek's Miles Clapham to play through a chunk of Crysis's campaign on the Xbox 360, the first thing I noticed was how good the new controls felt. The mapping has been redone to match with Crysis 2—RB now toggles stealth mode, sprint and power-jump are tied to the left thumbstick and the A button (you hold it down to do a power-jump). Other strength functions are tied to the environment—for example, get close enough to a soldier and you'll be given a prompt to grab him.


Crysis Doesn't Just Run On Consoles, It SoarsThe second thing I noticed is how great the game looks—thanks to the improved tech of CryEngine 3, Crysis on consoles looks just about as good as the (un-modded) PC version of the game, albeit not running in as high a resolution. I played through a chunk of the fourth chapter of the game, "Assault," which Crysis fans will remember as the mission that begins with a nighttime beach-run under heavy artillery fire. Midway through the level, the sun rises over Lingshan Island, and it looked as spectacular as I remember it from the first game. The lighting, foliage, and sense of "alive-ness" has been carried over intact. The small details are present, too—as I made my way up the beach, a small family of crabs skittered out of my way, and grenade blasts knocked over trees as reliably as ever.


Some aspects of the gameplay have been tweaked—I noticed that stealth mode depleted the nanosuit's reserves far more slowly, making the game feel a bit closer to its more-forgiving sequel. Inventory has been mapped to the "Y" button, with a nice four-direction menu like the one found in the console versions of Half-Life 2. But by and large, Crysis on Xbox 360 moved and played just like its PC counterpart. The physics and gunplay have that same precision, and the world has the same sense of complex reactiveness.


Clapham told me that, by far, the hardest part of getting Crysis to work on the Xbox was getting all of its AIs and systems to run simultaneously on the 360's comparatively small memory reserves. "I played through Crysis on PC on medium/low settings," he said, "and it used up 1.6 Gigs in the end. And we've got that down to 256MB [on the PS3], so we've had a huge squeeze there. The console has lots of processing power, but just to be able to run the kinds of things [the number of simultaneous systems] we're running in Crysis was a real challenge. Running this kind of visual quality on the PC, with the same hardware spec as the console, it runs at half the framerate of what we have now. CryEngine 3 has been huge, we've got huge improvements to the rendering pipeline."


All of the open, emergent fun of Crysis is here, and it's more playable than ever.

The entire time I played, Crysis ran beautifully, with nary a hitch or a framerate dip. Even on my 2011 gaming PC, Crysis hits some framerate issues when I run it at ultra-spec. But I saw no slowdown as I fought my way through guard posts, across bridges, over beaches and through the jungle. All of the open, emergent fun of Crysis is here, and it's more playable than ever.


The game will be out on October 4 on PS3 and Xbox 360, and will go for $19.99, or 1600 Microsoft points. It will be single-player only, and will not include Crysis's "Power Struggle" multiplayer mode. Most of the human enemies are North Korean soldiers, but they always speak English unless players put the difficulty all the way up to "Delta" mode. Sadly, there will still not be an option to turn on Korean enemy barks without changing the difficulty, but Clapham told me that the team is using the much-improved English audio enemy dialogue from Crysis: Warhead instead of the painfully bad tracks in the original Crysis, so that's something.


Crysis Doesn't Just Run On Consoles, It SoarsCrysis will never look as good on a console as it does on a high-end gaming PC, particularly if the PC version of the game has been modded or tweaked at all. But I was impressed with how thoroughly Crytek has translated the game to the new (old) systems. And perhaps more importantly, Crysis now handles very well—suit abilities are easier to access, vehicles handle better, and the whole thing feels nicely streamlined. And while the very mention of the word "streamlined" will make some PC players grumpy, well… there'll always be the original PC version. I, for one, would love to see a CryEngine 3 version of Crysis running in DirectX 11 on a tricked-out gaming PC. Sigh… we always want what we can't have.


By dropping the game into October Crytek and EA have chosen a… challenging time to release an FPS. A 2007 PC re-release stands no real chance of competing with Modern Warfare 3 and Battlefield 3. That said, neither of those games offer Crysis's uniquely engaging blend of sandboxy-shooting, stealth, and reactive action. Then again, they also don't share Crysis' dramatically inferior third act and finale. (Unless one of those games features hugely annoying flying squid enemies that no one's talking about.)


While it's tough to say how Crysis will do commercially, from what I saw, it plays well and looks lovely. Console players will finally have a chance to experience one of the longest-standing PC exclusives that they've never gotten to play, and the rest of us can kick back on the couch, grab a controller, and revisit an action classic.


Crawling through the leaves
Enemy patrol is near
Frog goes hopping by



You can contact Kirk Hamilton, the author of this post, at kirk@kotaku.com. You can also find him on Twitter, Facebook, and lurking around our #tips page.
Kotaku

A New Homefront is Coming and the People Who Made Far Cry Are Making It The folks behind Crysis and Far Cry have teamed up with THQ to work on the next Homefront, the publisher said this morning.


The game isn't due out for another 1 1/2 to 2 years, the company said in a press release.


"We see Homefront as a really strong universe that has a lot of potential and that has been expertly created and marketed by THQ," said Cevat Yerli, Founder, CEO and President of Crytek. "We believe that bringing our level of quality, creativity and production values to the next Homefront title creates an opportunity for both THQ and Crytek to deliver a truly blockbuster game. It's really important to us that THQ has the faith in giving us a lot of creative freedom over one of its most important properties to allow us to bring the Homefront world to life in a new and innovative way."


Homefront, which hit earlier this year to mixed reviews, took place during a future America occupied by North Korean forces. The game featured brutal portrayals of an occupied country in the year 2027. The game ended on a bit of a cliffhanger, with rebel forces taking back part of the country, but with still much to do.


THQ says Homefront was a commercial success and that the "yet-to-be-named sequel" is scheduled for release during THQ's fiscal 2014 on console and PC. THQ's 2014 fiscal year runs from April, 2013 to March 2014.


However, that commercial success didn't prevent THQ from shuttering the New York City-based developer behind the game. Kaos Studios was shut down over the summer as part of a "strategic realignment within its internal studio structure," the company told Kotaku at the time. THQ also said at the time that THQ's Montreal studio "will take over product development and overall creative management for the Homefront franchise."


So why shift gears and go with an outside studio?


"Selecting Crytek to take Homefront forward underscores our strategy of working with the industry's best talent," said Danny Bilson, EVP Core Games, THQ. "Homefront's unique setting and storyline captivated gamers the world over. With Crytek's industry leading technology and legendary experience in the FPS genre, we're supremely confident that the next Homefront will deliver that AAA-quality experience that players demand."



You can contact Brian Crecente, the author of this post, at brian@kotaku.com. You can also find him on Twitter, Facebook, and lurking around our #tips page.
Crysis

UPDATE 2: Crysis costs 1600 Microsoft Points on Xbox Live and £15.99/$19.99 on PlayStation Network.


Publisher EA describes the console download as a "modified and enhanced" version of the single-player campaign from Crysis 1. It also features optimized Nanosuit controls, fine-tuned combat and full stereoscopic 3D support.

UPDATE 1:
Crytek boss Cevat Yerli has confirmed that Crysis will launch as a PlayStation Network and Xbox Live title.


"For many years people were asking, can you do Crysis 1 on consoles?" he told GameTrailers. "We have been secretly working on that for a while. It's a digital download only. It looks just awesome, I believe."

ORIGINAL STORY: Sci-fi first-person shooter Crysis launches on the PlayStation 3 and Xbox 360 next month.


The game, which first launched on PC in 2007, is described as "remastered" in its debut GameTrailers exclusive video.


It has "all new lighting", "all new effects" and "all new Nanosuit controls".


Eurogamer's Crysis review shot a 9/10. "This is a game that feels supremely engineered, like a precision machine, or a German automobile," Jim Rossignol wrote.

Crysis

Four Years Later, Crysis Comes to ConsoleYes, but can your console run Crysis?


There's been talk of this happening for years (no surprise, given the fact the game is four years old!), but it's finally happening: PC benchmark Crysis is coming to the PS3 and Xbox 360.


It'll be out next month (talk about short notice!), and has a few new features courtesy of developers Crytek's advances over the past four years, including new lighting and new effects.


The clip below is showing the 360 version, and for the 360 version, it looks pretty damn good. Not top of the range PC good, but then, an Xbox 360 isn't a top of the range PC.


Get More: GameTrailers.com, Crysis - Exclusive Debut PS3/Xbox 360 Trailer HD, PC Games, PlayStation 3, Xbox 360



You can contact Luke Plunkett, the author of this post, at plunkett@kotaku.com. You can also find him on Twitter, Facebook, and lurking around our #tips page.
...