Assassin's Creed. It was the first game I played on the 360, and I was spellbound by the grahpics. Such a step up from the previous generation.
Shru-Bracken's forum posts
Hey. I was wondering whether Worms 2 (Xbox live arcade) has a map editor like its PC port Worms Reloaded.
I would love to be able to make my own maps. Also, can you change the weapon loadouts and things like that, making cooldowns for certain guns or blocking them altogether?
Many many thanks to whoever can answer my questions.
Shru
Hmm, interesting. I'll have to keep watching videos and make up my mind.
Grinding doesn't really bother me too much - most of the time in games like WoW you're just grinding on quests anyway, so there's not a ton of difference.
Played the beta. Didn't get far - it seemed bland, and the UI wasn't very intuitive. Typical fantasy MMO graphics with lacklustre animations and effects.
Quests were boring.
A big "meh" from me. It didn't pull me in, sadly. I was hoping for more. First impressions are very important for me, and if an MMORPG fails to grab me in the first few levels, it says a lot about the game.
Maybe some will love it, who knows?
I quit WoW because it was getting too samey, and I didn't want to buy yet another expansion.
I'm looking at Aion right now - it seems like it could be pretty fun, but I have some simple questions.
1) Buy or not?
2) How do the graphics compare to WoW?
3) Is it very repetitive?
4) How is the crafting?
Please feel free to add anything else you think is important.
Hi, I want to play Age of Empires 2 (The Conquerors Expansion) with a friend over our Local Area Network connection.
He'll be using a laptop close by. Will this use up my precious bandwidth?
If so, how much? Sorry if it sounds like a stupid question, I googled it and there wasn't any real answers.
Well, I just play whatever game I feel like playing at the time. It doesn't really matter which one you start with, so go with your instinct and have fun.
For example, if you're in the mood for some casual platforming fun, then play SMG, or if you feel like playing a slightly deeper RPG, pick up LoZTP and have a little play.
You don't have to devote your time to one or the other, try playing a level on SMG, maybe getting a star, then switch to LoZTP and play that for a while.
Thanks guys, that clears it all up for me.
I'd heard so many evil things about EA's DRM, I didn't know what to believe. 5 installs seems like plenty enough for me.
Well, Red Alert 3 is on Amazon.co.uk for £11.78, which is a pretty neat price.
But, as I'm sure you all know, it has that Digital Rights Management on it. My questions are these:
Will DRM screw up/slow down my computer?
What happens if they shut down their DRM servers; can I still play?
Why is DRM as bad as people say it is?
Will it affect me if I only plan to have RA3 on 1 computer and play it, nothing else?
Thanks again in advance.
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