Gaming

The MWE Emperor 200 PC work station is curvy, metallic, futuristic and probably awesome. I can see how a commenter on Kotaku’s gallery showing off the station might think that it, like cake and grief counseling, could be a lie.

With three 24-inch LED screens, an ergonomic leather chair and even its own air filtration system, it sounds like the Emperor 200 belongs in an Aperture Science Re-Education and Incentivization Testification Preparation Chamber, where you’re strapped down with your eyelids glued open, brainwashed by images of puppies getting stabbed or something. But it’s not. It’s just a $ 45,000 gaming rig that helps to minimize your physical movement, all but guaranteeing you do nothing but play Skyrim and The Old Republic until you’re too fat to ever move again.

Perhaps there’s an evil plan involved after all.




Source: Gaming Today

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Gaikai’s David Perry has told GamesIndustry.biz that streaming of full games – not just demos – via the cloud gaming service is ready to go live within months.

The immediate priority is to put cloud gaming on Facebook as revealed last week, but following that, users will be able to play entire games across a network of sites that includes YouTube, Best Buy and games publishers such as Electronic Arts and Ubisoft.

“If you give me your game today I can put your game in front of more than 100 million people, easily. Quite honestly if we put you on the homepage of YouTube right now on it’s own, you’re already hitting that number,” said Perry in an interview published today.


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Source: GamesIndustry.biz – News

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Sony Computer Entertainment boss Andy House noted on a video on the EU PlayStation Blog that the 3DS has done really well for itself since its rocky start last spring, and that fact demonstrates that there is definitely still a demand for mobile gaming devices that totally aren’t smartphones.

I think that shows that there is, in general, a lot of demand for a gaming primary portable device, which is how I would describe Vita. [However] our device in contrast has just so much more to offer. What I think we’ve done is point to a market that has really started out with potentially casual games on other devices, but now wants a deeper or better or more premier gaming experience.

Oh yeah, the PS Vita is soooooooooooooooo much better than the 3DS. Of course! Derp.




Source: Gaming Today

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Streaming service Gaikai has finalized a deal to bring hardcore PC game demos to Facebook, following previous deals made with YouTube, Wal Mart and others. Gaikai said it has been working with Facebook for some time, and it sees this as a golden opportunity for both parties.

“Facebook already owns the category of casual gaming; we’re going to help them own core games,” founder David Perry said at Cloud Gaming Europe, GamesIndustry reports. “A click and boom, you’re playing World of Warcraft.”

Perry demoed World of Warcraft on Facebook, but later clarified to GameSpot that Gaikai “is NOT bringing WoW to Facebook (at least not in the foreseeable future).” Gaikai’s approach to streaming games sees it in more of a marketing role than a game-provider, but introducing the Facebook audience to more hardcore opportunities shouldn’t be a bad thing. Unless your mom starts sending you invites to join her guild page, “Massive Mamacitas.”

JoystiqGaikai will introduce your mom to hardcore gaming through Facebook originally appeared on Joystiq on Wed, 18 Jan 2012 02:00:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Source: Joystiq

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More and more game developers are joining the call to protest the Stop Online Piracy Act working its way through the U.S. House of Representatives. The latest to join the march is Red 5 Studios, the developer behind Firefall.

Large chunks of the Internet community are planning a day of protest on Jan. 18, including the Cheezburger network of websites and Reddit. As Massively reports, Red 5 joined the list of game developers against the bill (which includes Riot Games and Epic Games) when it announced today it’ll be shutting down the Firefall beta as part of protest actions.

The beta will be down for 24 hours, as will a big chunk of the Internet. Destructoid plans to shut down in protest, replacing its website with a static image detailing SOPA protest options, as do a number of other sites and YouTube channels. GOG.com has also thrown its support into the fight against SOPA, with a detailed post about where it stands.

Among other vocal opponents of SOPA like Al Gore — Markus “Notch Persson, the creator of Minecraft. He and his company, Mojang, oppose the bill, with Notch making a statement against it that basically called SOPA, and the powers of censorship it grants, insane.

“No sane person can be for SOPA,” he told PC Gamer. “I don’t know if we’re sane, but we are strongly, uncompromisingly against SOPA, and any similar laws. Sacrificing freedom of speech for the benefit of corporate profit is abominable and disgusting.”

With so much of the Internet blacking itself out on Jan. 18 in protest, there’s a great opportunity for American Internet users everywhere to do their parts. Educate yourself by reading the full bill here. Spend the day Thursday writing or calling your local congressional representatives and Senators and express your misgivings with SOPA and its Senate counterpart bill, the Protect IP Act (PIPA).

Visit AmericanCensorship.org for ways you can help stop SOPA and PIPA. You can also check out all our SOPA coverage up to now right here, and we’ll have (much) more next week.




Source: Gaming Today

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Last week’s release of a tenth anniversary edition of Grand Theft Auto 3 on mobile devices presents developers and publishers with brand new opportunities in exercising the power of their back catalogues, and demonstrates just how far portable technology has progressed. But can the classic games of yesteryear work effectively on the touchscreen-driven interfaces that have defined the new mobile era? And to put it bluntly, are these titles good enough to compete with current mobile games?

The response to Rockstar’s mobile GTA3 offering has mostly been positive, but its release has generated some controversy. Some view it as a straightforward port that in no way challenges the best that portable gaming currently offers, and yet still struggles to maintain graphical integrity. Alternatively it’s been viewed as conclusive affirmation that mobile gaming is slowly growing up – that the divide between home and mobile gaming is blurring, and that with small tweaks, complex content is perfectly at home on devices geared towards casual gaming.

Both assessments are equally valid: in many ways, the conversion is a little rough around the edges and the introduction of various shadow glitches, depth-sorting issues and ugly pop-in artifacts that we never saw on the decade-old versions are disappointing. But it’s equally important to point out that this is more than just a PC conversion, featuring many of the enhancements Rockstar Vienna added to the original Xbox version of the game which appeared two years after the original release in October 2001.


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Source: GamesIndustry.biz – News

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To celebrate the upcoming full release of The Old Repbulic — and the partial pre-order access — we put together this graphic showing the four major eras of the Star Wars universe and where the franchise’s games fall into place.

The timeline isn’t to scale — view the lightsaber sidebar to understand why — but the relative positioning of sequential titles and events are accurately depicted. To keep this graphic a reasonable size, we had to cut roughly half of the Star Wars games from our list — mostly expansion packs, handheld-exclusives, educational titles, or games excessively geared toward children.




Source: Gaming Today

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The 5 Greatest Gaming Moments Of All Time

by Salat on December 14, 2011 · 0 comments

2011 will probably seen as a watershed moment in gaming. There were no new consoles of course, computers remained, well, computing devices, and the biggest games were all sequels. But in June, the Supreme Court of the United States ruled to overturn an odious censorship law aimed at games and in the process, bestowed them with legal recognition that they’re art. That’s a big deal, and it’s as good a reason as any to reflect on the last 50 years or so of gaming and think about the achievements that got us here.

With that in mind, here’s GameFront’s list of the 5 greatest gaming moments of all time.

5) 2009: Video Game Sales Surpass Film and Music.

Coming in at number 5 is the moment that the gaming industry grew up, moved out of its parent’s homes and got a job. Naturally, video games have been big business going back to the 70s, but the industry was still considered a second-rate entertainment revenue stream. That changed in the first decade of the 21st century, when video game sales began to overtake film and music sales. The exact point of demarcation is up for grabs. 2005 is the year American video game sales overtook film. In 2007, games finally overtook the music industry domestically. In 2008, worldwide video game sales surpassed both music and the movie industry.

For our money, it’s 2009, the year video game sales finally surpassed film, music and the DVD/Blu-ray industries (in total, not combined). Video Games have essentially been dominant ever since. 2011 estimates aren’t in yet, but to put things in perspective, for the month of November, the gaming industry enjoyed 3 billion dollars in domestic sales. Total 2011 movie ticket sales are estimated around 9 Billion.

4) 1997: Deep Blue (Probably) Beats Garry Kasparov

In 1997, Chess Champion gary Kasparov was on top of the world. Already regarded as one of the greatest chess players in the history of the game, he had beaten IBM’s beefy chess-playing computer Deep Blue 4-2, ‘proving’ that artificial intelligence could not match the power of the human mind. His victory still fresh in global imagination, he agreed to a rematch in 1997, and in a stunning upset, Deep Blue won this series, 3.5 to 2.5. This humiliated Kasparov and boosting IBM’s reputation just as the dot com boom was kicking into full swing.

A 2003 documentary investigated Kasparov’s claim that IBM cheated during the 1997 rematch and concluded they may just have, as a stunt to boost their stock value. IBM claims otherwise, but having dismantled Deep Blue, we’ll never know. What is clear, however, is that an artificial game-playing intelligence beat a human being, forever changing the way people looked at computer gaming. That advances made in the development of Deep Blue have profoundly affected subsequent video game AI is simply an added bonus. Sure, Chess might not be a video game, but Deep Blue sure it. And we’re just happy to find out the old adage is true: In Russia, Video Game Plays You!

Click on to see the top 3!




Source: Gaming Today

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