

alteveer writes “Just like Quake 3 before it, the Doom 3 source code has been released to the public (minus rendering of stencil shadows via the ‘depth fail’ method, a functionality commonly known as ‘Carmack’s Reverse’).”


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Activision released the latest iteration of their blockbuster first-person shooter franchise yesterday, Call of Duty: Modern Warfare 3, narrowly avoiding a whole year-long gap between this one and the last Call of Duty game. Still, analysts estimated pre-orders at 9 million worldwide, and expect the game to generate another billion dollars in sales, give or take. Reviews for the game range from “amazing” to “slightly less than amazing.” Eurogamer sums it up simply: “Modern Warfare 3 is exactly the game you expect. It’s conservative in every sense of the word, a paean to military superiority which never ventures far beyond gameplay parameters that were set in stone in 2007. … With such a well-rehearsed recipe to follow, there’s more room here for innovation than there is for improvement. There are plenty who would love to see Call of Duty dragged through the mud for its lack of new ideas, but the game itself is too confidently constructed, too generous with its pleasures, to deserve any lasting vitriol. This is a ferocious and satisfying game that knows exactly what players expect, and delivers on that promise with bullish confidence.”


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New submitter wesbascas writes “Have you ever wanted to play a new PC game, but weren’t sure where your PC falls between the minimum and recommended system requirements? I don’t have a whole lot of time to game these days and with new hardware perpetually coming out and component vendors often tweaking their model numbering schemes, knowing exactly what kind of experience I’m buying for $60 can be difficult. Luckily, somebody benchmarked Battlefield 3’s campaign on a wide range of hardware configurations and detail settings. If you’ve purchased a system in the past few years you should be in luck. The video cards tested start with the AMD Radeon HD 4670 and Nvidia GeForce 8500 GT, and go up to the brand new Radeon HD 6990 and GeForce GTX 590. I hate it that my aging Radeon HD 4870 isn’t going to cut it at 1080p, but am glad that I found out before buying the game.”
If you’re curious about the game itself, here’s a detailed review from Eurogamer and a briefer one from Rock, Paper, Shotgun.


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dotarray writes “An American aquarium supplier obviously has a gamer on the payroll, after naming two new forms of Acanthastrea coral after Activision’s shooter Call of Duty: Black Ops. From the article: ‘The Facebook post announcing the two new forms openly admits to the video gaming influence – and it’s not the first time a video game has inspired the Quality Marine coral namer – One of Swords points out that earlier this month, The Master Chief made its glorious pink-and-purple debut.’”


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BioWare has announced that Mass Effect 3, planned for March of next year, will be the first game in the series to include co-operative multiplayer. In a post on their forums, they provided details about the new mode of play:
“Success in multi-player will have a direct impact on the outcome of the single player campaign, giving players an alternative method of achieving ultimate victory … In multiplayer, players will create custom characters to fight on different and unique fronts in the war. This will include the ability to play as favorites like Turians, Krogans, Asari and more each with their own unique set of abilities.”
They also took pains to point out that while the co-op missions could affect the outcome of the main story, multiplayer is entirely optional.


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BioWare has announced that Mass Effect 3, planned for March of next year, will be the first game in the series to include co-operative multiplayer. In a post on their forums, they provided details about the new mode of play:
“Success in multi-player will have a direct impact on the outcome of the single player campaign, giving players an alternative method of achieving ultimate victory … In multiplayer, players will create custom characters to fight on different and unique fronts in the war. This will include the ability to play as favorites like Turians, Krogans, Asari and more each with their own unique set of abilities.”
They also took pains to point out that while the co-op missions could affect the outcome of the main story, multiplayer is entirely optional.


Read more of this story at Slashdot.





BioWare has announced that Mass Effect 3, planned for March of next year, will be the first game in the series to include co-operative multiplayer. In a post on their forums, they provided details about the new mode of play:
“Success in multi-player will have a direct impact on the outcome of the single player campaign, giving players an alternative method of achieving ultimate victory … In multiplayer, players will create custom characters to fight on different and unique fronts in the war. This will include the ability to play as favorites like Turians, Krogans, Asari and more each with their own unique set of abilities.”
They also took pains to point out that while the co-op missions could affect the outcome of the main story, multiplayer is entirely optional.


Read more of this story at Slashdot.

Today marks the launch of RAGE, id Software’s post-apocalyptic first-person shooter that’s been in development for at least four years. Early response to the game is mixed, but mostly positive. Eurogamer wrote, “This certainly isn’t a video game like the ones we’re used to playing in 2011, smothered in celebrity voice actors and shoulder-grabbingly intense expository cut-scenes, and varnished by psychologists so we never look in the wrong direction when we’re sprinting away from a set-piece. Instead it’s something simpler and more old-fashioned. Judged on game design and content, then, it’s slightly anachronistic, but as a toy box full of things you can only do in games, RAGE is warm-hearted and refreshing.” The review at Opposable Thumbs was much more critical, saying, “None of the game’s ideas are thought out or fully explored, so the game feels like a series of dead ends in a world that is hard to care about, in which you play a bland character doing boring things against stock enemies using weak guns.” If you’d like to see a look at the actual gameplay, Giant Bomb has a lengthy video with commentary.


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Today marks the launch of RAGE, id Software’s post-apocalyptic first-person shooter that’s been in development for at least four years. Early response to the game is mixed, but mostly positive. Eurogamer wrote, “This certainly isn’t a video game like the ones we’re used to playing in 2011, smothered in celebrity voice actors and shoulder-grabbingly intense expository cut-scenes, and varnished by psychologists so we never look in the wrong direction when we’re sprinting away from a set-piece. Instead it’s something simpler and more old-fashioned. Judged on game design and content, then, it’s slightly anachronistic, but as a toy box full of things you can only do in games, RAGE is warm-hearted and refreshing.” The review at Opposable Thumbs was much more critical, saying, “None of the game’s ideas are thought out or fully explored, so the game feels like a series of dead ends in a world that is hard to care about, in which you play a bland character doing boring things against stock enemies using weak guns.” If you’d like to see a look at the actual gameplay, Giant Bomb has a lengthy video with commentary.


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phaedrus5001 writes “Ars has a story about a first person shooter under development that involves no shooting on the part of the player; at least, no shooting bullets. The game, Warco, has the player in the role of a war correspondent. The object is to immerse yourself in missions and firefights in order to document what happens. From the article: ‘Players will experience the process of filming conflicts, going into dangerous situations armed with nothing but a camera. They will then edit the footage into a compelling news story.’ While it’s an interesting and different concept, it should be even more interesting to see if the developers can actually convince a publisher to release the project.”


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