Saints Row 2


 
Here are the first 12 minutes of Saints Row: The Third. Before you even jump into the character creator, you spend the prologue robbing a bank by using a helicopter to tear the entire vault out of the heart of the building. Believe it or not, things escalate from there in the full game. All will be revealed on release day, which is Tuesday November 15 in the US, and Friday November 18 in Europe. Saints Row is landing in the heart of release season, close to Modern Warfare 3, Skyrim, Batman: Arkham City, Assassin's Creed Revelations and every other blockbuster. Will you be setting aside some cash for Saints Row: The Third?
PC Gamer
Valve
"The Steam Forums are temporarily offline for maintenance. Your patience is appreciated." That's the message you'll get if you're trying to log into the Steam forums at the moment. They've been taken down due to an apparent hack that briefly saw front page text changed to advertise a game hacks site. Eurogamer say that some Steam users have had their email addresses spammed with messages from this site

A screenshot of the Steam forums before the hack shows that the official notices section at the top of the page had been altered to promote a site called Fkn0wned. The hack is a worrying breach of Steam's usually watertight security, and is especially concerning for users whose Steam login details are the same as their Steam account username and password. Valve haven't commented on the breach yet.
PC Gamer
minecraft slide thumb
When the little sales ticker on the Minecraft homepage ticked over from 0 to 1, it no doubt dreamed of one day becoming seven numbers wide and bigger than all its friends. Minecraft passed the one million mark long ago, and has now climbed all the way up to the giddy heights of four million. More than sixteen million have registered to play the free version, and no doubt many more are waiting for Minecraft's imminent release on November 18.

Minecraft creator, Notch mocked Twitter's 140 character limit by recognising and celebrating the milestone in the space of just seven characters. "4milyay," he Twittered. If you're one of the four million Minecraft owners, you might be interested in our updated selection of the 25 best Minecraft mods.

Are you one of the seven odd billion remaining humans who hasn't bought Minecraft? Are you tempted to get hold of it?
Mass Effect (2007)
Mass Effect 3
Word emerges via VG247 that 13 minutes of footage have leaked from the unpolished beta demo of Mass Effect 3. The sketchy combat suggest's it's from some early code, but there's plenty of juicy but SPOILERY stoy bits. I even broke out the bold there, so if you're steering clear of all Mass Effect 3 story info then stop reading now.

If you're not sure whether the new footage below is worth watching and you'd allow me two words to tell you why, I'd use these: Krogan lady.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?feature=player_embedded&v=LoBRhSo2kPE
Call of Duty® 4: Modern Warfare® (2007)

http://youtu.be/zuzaxlddWbk

The new live action Modern Warfare 3 trailer shows a rare event. A veteran helping out a new player without telling him to GTFO. The prestiged pro makes it through the entire trailer without once saying anything even vaguely unpleasant about the other guy's mother, showing immense restraint when the noob RPGs a single man five metres away (a very familiar sight for Battlefield 3 players at the moment).

Call of Duty fever is reaching frenzied levels. CVG mention a van hijacking in France in which masked attackers used tear gas to stall a delivery vehicle, and reportedly made up with 6,000 copies of Modern Warfare 3. There are midnight launches happening around the world tonight, and launch events will be broadcast live on the Call of Duty: Modern Warfare 3 Youtube channel.

If you go along to your local launch and it turns out to be two men in ski masks selling copies out of a van, give Interpol a ring. Will you be picking up a copy of CoD this week?
The Elder Scrolls IV: Oblivion® Game of the Year Edition (2009)
Skyrim horse thumb
A post on the Bethblog on Friday announced that The Elder Scrolls V: Skyrim is done. "We’re pleased to announce that after more than three years of hard work, the team at Bethesda Game Studios has completed over 20 versions of Skyrim — across multiple platforms, languages, and countries. That’s right, Skyrim is officially gold!" cheers the announcement.

The team celebrated with a drop or two of golden mead, which has already played its part in Skyrim's development.

Beyond the excitement of the fact that one of the biggest games of the year is finished and on its way into shops, it's worth noting that Bethesda are cutting this rather fine. Typically games go gold several weeks before release to give the freshly printed discs time to leave the factories and make their way to stores. Skyrim is out this Friday, apparently just seven days after being finished.
DC Universe™ Online
Gyossait
My skin's a-crawlin' after playing Gyossait this week. It's an interesting and wholly creepy platformer about the creator of mankind burrowing deep below the planet's surface in search of his lost love - and despite its simplicity (or perhaps because of it?) it manages to be thoroughly disturbing. If you want a bit less darkness and a bit more colour, though, try out DC Universe Online, which is now free-to-play. Plus: the tale of Icarus retold, a two-player driving game where you can play as a road, and a simple but effective tower defence game. Read on for this week's best freebies...



Gyossait

Amon 26. Play it on NewGrounds.



Gyossait is a super-creepy platformer in which you play as Oyeatia, the creator of mankind, as he delves into the depths of the Earth in search of his lost love. Armed with only a shield, with which you can deflect enemies' attacks back at them, you'll navigate a series of disturbing levels, hunting for keys and avoiding the instant-death situations that crop up with an alarming frequency.

The low-definition world is, despite its blockiness, drawn with a crude surrealism, lending to the dark and menacing tone of the game as a whole. And the sound design is just lovely. The ambient noises loop awkwardly, droning away, as scratchy and imprecise as the visuals but adding yet more of the unnerving atmosphere that the game is drenched in. And while the controls could be a little more fluid, such issues don't detract significantly from what is a genuinely enthralling little browser game.

Icarus

AutomaticJill. Play it at the Hand Eye Society.



You'll probably be familiar with the Greek mythology surrounding Daedalus and Icarus. This top-down adventure is an attempt to re-tell that tale, and it's an impressively creative re-imagining featuring a 20-something slacker who loves videogames and sleeps in his own filth, an unfortunately dead father, and JETPACKS!

While it looks almost like a top-down RPG, and has plenty of point-and-click adventure elements, much of the inspiration for Icarus comes from interactive fiction. There is a lot of reading. A lot. Reams of text are available to read in a library. The developer says much of this text is currently placeholder, but it reads fine, serves a purpose. The rest of the game comprises searching for essential objects and filling in the story, which can be a little tedious. That's a shame, but the story the game tells is well worth experiencing - so persevere through the less exciting bits.

Roadeo

Eventhandler. Play it on Kongregate.



This is a lovely browser-based driving game with a smart twist. Player 1 controls the car, player 2 controls the road. In Versus mode, it's the job of the driver to stay on the road as their opponent weaves and twists that road in real-time, hoping to throw the driver off-course. Not only can devilish turns be incorporated, you've also the ability to add a speed boost to both the road and the car in an extra effort to confuse your opponent.

There's also a co-op mode where your job is to work together to survive as long as possible. For this there's scenery to contend with: if the road hits a tree or a house, it's game over; if the car veers off the road, that's the end of your attempt too. Roadeo is surprisingly challenging, especially when the environment fancies getting in the way more than usual, but it remains compulsive playing with a friend. Good, silly, imaginative fun.

FFFLOOD

Vlambeer. Download it from TIGSource.



Hey, look, it's Vlambeer again, continuing to create some simple yet delightful games. This one's straight-up tower-defence, but what's impressive is just how hectic things become so quickly.

It revels in its own basic visual design, as well: a cream background, with small coloured squares indicating your approaching enemies. The story goes that you've been assigned to a planet with the objective of clearing out its wildlife, ready for new holiday resorts to be built - but that's all basically irrelevant as you work out how best to position your turrets.

It's still in alpha stage, which kind of shows, but it's already a lot of fun.

DC Universe Online

Sony/Warner Bros. Get started on the official website.



Although only launched back in January, Sony's DC Universe Online has already become the latest MMO to take the plunge into the free-to-play space. Everyone else is doing it, so why not, I guess. Sony's idea was to create a new kind of MMO: one with a focus on physics-driven combat scenarios. I haven't played it, I admit, so let's turn to Josh for a critique:

"Its action-oriented design is a bold step out of WoW’s shadow. From the consistently clever boss fights to the daily activities to the points-of-interest around the world, it makes it look effortless to create interesting activities to amuse players and immerse them in the game’s world."

I'd say that sounds pretty good. Have a read of PC Gamer's full review to find out more.

PCGamer.com’s Best Free PC Games Features are brought to you in association with Virgin Media 50 Mb Broadband. Get ultrafast broadband now at virginmedia.com/gaming or call 0800 052 0273
RIFT
RIFT_EmberIsle_10
There's no such thing as too much content in your favorite MMO. Rift just turned eight months old and the people at Trion Worlds have been pumping out more post-launch content than other MMOs produce in years, and aren't showing any signs of slowing. Their next major patch (1.6) will include the gigantic mass of land known as Ember Isle. Rift's Design Producer, Hal Hanlin, walked us through the zone to get a view of some of the new stuff coming to Rift fans mid November.



The Island and Invasions
Rift players have been asking for more explorable content for some time and Ember Isle is the developer's answer to their call. In the lore, Ember Isle was originally the home of the Kelari elves and served as the home for dwarf castaways stranded by the power of Akylios, a giant sea beast that serves as the major raid boss in Hammerknell. Hal Hanlin told us that it would be roughly "twice the size of Shimmersand for playable space." Considering that Shimmersand is the largest current zone, that means a heck of a lot more area to explore. Thankfully there are multiple Porticulum locations allowing the player to move around easily. On this new island you will find biomes ranging from beachfront property, jungles and even a massive volcano which embodies the chaotic nature of Ember Isle.

The five planes will be present on the island, each trying to utilize the abundance or source stone, the basis for Defiant technology and Guardian worship, towards their own motives. Hanlin explained to us that Ember Isle was designed with invasions in mind and the new sourcewells would allow players to define wear they make their stand. Gathering around sourcewells, players create their own defensive positions by building up turrets and healing beacons, all while drawing the invasions in with Nexus Infusion, a new planar ability. Some of these sourcewells will have very clear paths for incoming planar forces, but some will be in the open making defense a bit more difficult. The invasions also include a new Onslaught system, increasing the difficulty and number of enemies that attack depending on the level of fortification around sourcewells.



New Instances and Instant Adventures

The biggest addition for instanced group content will be the new dungeon, Caduceus Rise. The dungeon will have multiple paths and is a "non-linear experience," according to Hal. With a normal mode and two different expert versions, players are encouraged to take their own route through the dungeon. When asked if there would be a Master mode added at some point, Hal said it was a possibility but not something included in this patch. Raid content is planned in the future but it will also not be included in Rift patch 1.6. "We want to give players the chance to experience the new zone and finish Hammerknell before we rush them into a new raid," Hanlin explained. Die hard raiders don't fret, there will be a new sliver coming to Shimmersand and in the future Hanlin hinted at being able to take on Maelforge, the red dragon imprisoned within Ember Isle.



Other group content will include the new Instant Adventures. Instant Adventures will pull together large groups of players to overcome challenges in Stillmoor and Shimmersand. Players will be able to drop in and drop out anytime they want, making it easy for the casual and hardcore to participate. The adventures are in open zones and many groups of players can work together accomplish goals. Hanlin seemed to be most excited about these adventures of any of the new content, saying that he often lost track of time because he was so into the fun. PvP isn't a large focus of Instant Adventures (unless you are on a pvp server), but Trion still managed to add a new version of Black Garden to satiate our blood lust.

Overall patch 1.6 is looking like one of the biggest yet, adding more territory to explore and improving Rift's ever growing versatility. Check out the rest of the released screenshots showcasing some new enemies you'll be fighting below.


 

 

 

 

 

 



PC Gamer
SteelSeries mmo keyboard
It's that time again, the time were I offer you free stuff in exchange for making me laugh briefly at your humorous comments. Today we're giving away a bunch of lovely Steelseries and Runes of Magic goodies, including not one, but two Steelseries shift keyboards with MMO accessories to give away.

Check inside for details of how to enter.

Here's what we have to give away, click the links for more info:

Winner:

1 Steelseries Shift Keyboard
1 MMO Accessory
1 Steelseries Siberia headset
1 Runes of Magic Mousemat

 
Runner up:

1 Steelseries Shift Keyboard
1 MMO Accessory
1 Runes of Magic Mousemat

 
Three more winners:

1 Runes of Magic Mousemat

 
To enter, simply tell me this:

What would you do if you could use keyboard shortcuts in real life? Ctrl C, Ctrl V your cake? Ctrl Z spilling your drink? The funniest and most creative answers will win.

European readers only. The winner will appear in this week's winners next Friday. If you win, make sure to contact us with your address so that we can mail you your prizes.

Good luck to everyone!
PC Gamer
GTA
Every week, Richard Cobbett rolls the dice to bring you an obscure slice of gaming history, from lost gems to weapons grade atrocities. This week, a trip back to where the legend that is Grand Theft Auto first started... give or take a few thousand miles and a quick expansion pack...

Liberty City. Vice City. San Andreas. Since the first Grand Theft Auto back in 1997, they've been our explosive playgrounds for criminal activity, casual murder and annoying the crap out of the Daily Mail. In GTA V, we now know we'll be heading back to the third. But what of the city the series forgot? No, not the weird future one from GTA2 that nobody remembers. I speak of course... of London.





GTA: London is the only game in the series to be set in a real place... though not to the extent that you should use it to find your way around or anything... and was an expansion pack for the original GTA. Somewhat unusually, it's also one of the few expansion packs to get its own expansion pack, London, 1961, which was released as freeware and would have taken over from its parent game as the earliest point in the GTA timeline had the series had even the slightest interest in having one back then.

The early GTA games were a far cry... not that one... from the open-world, story based games out now. Without wanting to diminish the achievement of creating believably functional cities back in the late 90s, they were essentially arcade games, complete with points, high score tables, and much more freedom. Instead of screaming at the screen as Niko Bellic shuffles around the screen with $30,000 in his pocket but no compulsion to do anything but goon for assholes he despises, you were simply dropped in the middle of the world with the job of hitting a certain number of points to progress. If this meant blowing up half the city to deliver a motorbike, so be it. And it almost certainly would.

The easiest path was doing missions, which you only got one shot at, but you could make your own way too by creating chaos, finding hidden objectives around the city, or just running over hippies and Hare Krishnas. At no point would anyone call you up to ask if you wanted to go bowling. The only hot coffee the media needed to care about was the cup by their keyboard as they wrote endless screeds about how games like this would ruin the world. As we all now know, they were actually thinking of Myst.



GTA: London was almost exactly the same game, with slightly different 'jokes'. This being before Lazlow showed up to make Chatterbox FM a thing of wonder and beauty worth parking a stolen car for, most of them are 'clever' names that more than deserve their apostrophes. Player names? Sid Vacant. Maurice Caine. Rodney Morash. Charles Jones. Del Rename. R. Reset- wait, sorry, that's the option menu. The big bad criminals in charge of London 1969 are the Crisp Twins, which is a reference to the Krays but not exactly a joke, there's a car called the Crapi, another called the James Bomb... you get the idea.

Beyond that, the only real difference from the original is the inclusion of words like 'ponce' and 'tasty' and 'leave it aaaht', though not usually in correct sentences. Much of the dialogue sounds like it was designed by pinning Eastenders transcripts on a dart-board, then going down to the pub to try and remember what they were. Your first contact for instance tells you "I'm the monkey and you're the cheese-grater," while the second informs you "In a couple of years I'll be taking over the whole bread basket and if you've got that special summfink you can too, now stop loafing around."

...

Thus speaks a man with serious logic gaps in his ambition. And if you're wondering how intimidating he sounds... we're not so much talking master criminal as a less confident Mackensie Crook. These are not games anyone expected to one day boast all-star casts. Ones with actual actors, maybe...



The light conversion continues in all the obvious places. When you die, you're told 'YOU'RE BROWN BREAD' because brown bread is shit it's slang for 'dead', and you don't get arrested by the police so much as nicked by the rozzers. But they still let you back out on the street after shooting a rocket launcher at a tour bus, without even checking if you can do the secret handshake or have what's left of your trousers at half-mast. Realism? Pah. It's a game with lives. The cars do however finally drive on the right side of the road. Which is to say, the left side of the road. That's a massive improvement for the five seconds or so you actually spend obeying the rules. Like a great big Nigel. Called Julian.

...and after that point, it's standard GTA. Not surprising. It was an expansion pack, after all.



But what if London had taken its place amongst the holy trinity of GTA cities, and been a true candidate for full-3D greatness? There are reasons to leave it out... sorry... leave it aaaaht of the running, like giving Rockstar the freedom to create whatever they want every console generation, but surely London, the very cradle of civilisation-with-an-s, deserves another chance? Imagine the possibilities!

Okay, so most of the driving would have to go. Driving around London is a stupid idea, which would need to be replaced with boosting characters' Oyster cards to travel on the Underground, or heading home to top-up at regular intervals. For getting around in a hurry, the game's leading scumbag would instead make proper use of a Boris Bike. It may not have the class of driving around in a tank, but on the bright side, it does mean the wages of sin don't have to be wasted on congestion charges. As your boss, Big Al "Da Crowbar" Killingsworth will explain, everyone's got to do their bit in the current recession. Tying into the GTA series' increasing use of anti-heroes, you can also take solace that while you may still be forcing your enemies into concrete shoes, you're doing it with a spectacularly low carbon footprint.



Next, guns. Gone too, obviously, thanks to the UK's strict firearm policy. This will have a bit of a knock-on effect on the missions, but a new British sensibility to the combat will help. This time, you may not have a battle-tank or AK-47, but you will still be armed with all the standard weaponry expected of Her Majesty's Subjects, including cutting wit, biting sarcasm and a rusty shiv. The challenges ahead of you will be different, as you'd expect, but no less exciting - like figuring out how to get from Paddington to Camden while the Circle/District line is shut, driving a tour bus for extra money, carefully sneaking past drunken hen parties at midnight, and beating chuggers to death with a cricket bat.

And the main game? Obviously, it'll be a full multiplayer experience, with all players starting out as those people who hand out fliers for dodgy sounding 'Learn To Speak English Good' schools on the Tottenham Court Road. Soon enough though, you're sucked into the depths of the London underworld, being forced to fight for your life against drug-crazed tramps, feeling the callous boots of the Old Bill on your face as you politely protest student fees on behalf of the local guv'ner's activist daughter, and even resort to eating dinner at Wetherspoons. But that's only the start of your problems! Soon you realise your ambitious boss is in league with foreign terrorists from overseas, and your past loyalties have made you all the lynchpins of a dastardly attempt to repatriate America via a co-ordinated strike on Buckingham Palace itself. Sneaking into the Tower of London to sabotage the day of the event by replacing the Crown Jewels with a Tesco-brand strudel seems like the obvious solution, until the Queen is blown up by an exploding dildo in an unrelated incident. The winner is the first to get to 1000 points.

Or it could be something like Lock Stock meets The Getaway. That could work too.



If you want to play GTA: London, you're mostly out of luck, unless you want to hit up eBay, since stealing a game called Grand Theft Auto would be as wrong as it is deliciously ironic. You can however download both GTA and GTA2 for free at Rockstar Classics, amd just pretend the characters are speaking proper English, instead of that weird version where 'honour has no 'u' in it and the letter z is allowed to run rampant. You can also download a copy of Wild Metal Country, the game universally referred to as "What the hell is Wild Metal Country?", if you want to find out what it is.

As for the real GTA V, if you missed the trailer earlier this week, here it is again.
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