Archive for February, 2009
Gaming Paranoia
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I’ve been feeling a little uneasy, ever since the email arrived from Google News Alerts a few days back. I swear I didn’t even sign up for any ‘news alerts’. How did they get my email address and why are they sending me this spam? Who are these mysterious Google people anyway and what do they want with me? Sorry…, where was I? Ok, so I’m at Starbucks last Wednesday and I’m checking my email, and I see a Google News Alert link to this story about a study that shows violent video games make gamers paranoid. Please. Are they kidding me? I don’t have time for this rubbish.
Instead I fire up my DS Lite and dive stealthily back into Assasin’s Creed: Altair’s Chronicles, and proceed to climb another ladder.
50 Ways to Shoot Your Lover
[UPDATED] Firstly an apology. You’ve just read a cheap and possibly misleading post title but at least I’ve got your attention. Quite possibly the Incomplete Gamer has also been flagged by the Federal authorities, been noticed by the Gun Owners of America, and been listed on the Guns and Ammo links page. What can I say. We need the traffic.
Nor should this post technically be listed as a Fed-Ex Alert. Not unless we get in our time machine and travel back to 1997; November to be precise, for the launch of the Pentax SMCP-FA 50mm f/1.4 AF. The lens is in-coming, however, in the sense that we’ve ordered a new copy of the said lens and with a bit of luck the parcel might even arrive tomorrow.
Burnout Paradise : The Ultimate Bargain
Throughout 2008, game developer Criterion Games earned plenty of well-deserved praise for its racing title Burnout Paradise (PS3/Xbox360). Not content with creating a great, open-world racing game, Criterion spent the last twelve months delivering additional content, and further tweaking the game play, garnering respect from gamers and the gaming media alike along the way. Best of all, that content cost nothing! Feel free to correct The Incomplete Gamer, but if there’s a better supported title on the market today, then we don’t know about it. That support continues this year, commencing with this major free update which landed on February 6th.
Criterion Games have done a sterling job in keeping the Burnout Paradise faithful happy, but what does a developer do to jump start sales of a 12 month old game in a crowded marketplace. Criterion Games relaunched the game! A new SKU, and a new title (Burnout Paradise: Ultimate Box), complete with all the free downloadable content to date as well as the new premium (read: not free) content; the Party Pack – a play at home, social, pass the controller type mode.
