VAMP in mgs 4, it wasn't really hard but first playthrough i almost ran out of ammo trying to figure it out


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the developer/loudmouth that hypes this game as awesome first person shootan said you can literally steal his hat.
he also said somewhere in the massive amount of interviews i read that one of the playtesters beat the game with only killing a single radroach.
splinter cell: chaos theory.
i'd probably point to it as the single best creative accomplishment to ever come out of the entire history of vidiot games
This would be a cool Paintball game. You start off with like ten zombies vs. 2 survivors. Survivors get paintball guns and can only kill the zombies with headshots. The zombies only have to tag you. To make it interesting, you'd play on a hill map, where you defend a fort. (obvious)who wants to be on a paintball field with no gun?
That would beat any game zombie sim!
I'm totally serious about this too. I'll probably do this next time I go paintballing. Damn it'd be intense!
You'd have to funnel the area they can come up, and you'd have limited ammo! defending for say five minutes. Wow I can't believe I didn't think of this earlier! It would be freakin' insane man.
xcom ufo defense
jagged alliance 2
system shock 2
these three games are about 150+ hours of gameplay if you beat all three and all very good
With Pablo just slip him $500 and he'll stop losing your stuff. Don't kill him though, the guy that replaces him is 5 times worse and you can't pay him off.
"Coffee money...help keep my eyes open, if you know what I mean"
You might be familiar with these games but they were pretty obscure, especially outside Europe. When it came to releasing the games internationally, EA renamed both of the games because they were afraid people would think the games were too kiddy (Most developers were making very mature games, LBA was intentionally quite unique.)
Little Big Adventure 1 Known as Relentless: Twinsen's Adventure in the US
Platforms: PC (MS-DOS), PlayStation, PC (Windows)
Released in 1994Little Big Adventure plays entirely from an isometric perspective, unlike it's sequel. Both games are quite similar but have a very different feel, the original being a much darker world that has been overrun by the evil Dr FunFrock and his cloned army. In the second game you are a proven hero but in the first game people are less willing to trust you and is definately a harder, sometimes frustrating experience. The behaviour mode is quite unique (You can switch between normal, athletic, agressive and sneaky modes at any time). Overall, it's just as enjoyable as it's sequel with it's great moments and interesting story-telling with unique characters in a world that you will want to explore.
Screenshots
More info: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Little_Big_Adventure
Little Big Adventure 2 Known as Twinsen's Odyssey in the US
Platforms: PC (MS-DOS), PC (Windows)
Released in 1997This game is just a ton of fun to play and the game world is awesome to explore. It's short and sweet with varied gameplay. The graphics and animation are done really well and the characters are all unique with unique voice-overs for all dialogue. The gameplay is split up into outdoor areas which are fully 3D and the indoor areas which use the isometric engine from the first game. The game plays like an action-adventure game, but it also has RPG/Puzzle elements that aren't too deep but keep things interesting. I like how the planets themselves are very different, each of them contain unique species and have their own associated music and their own currency and technology. If you like quirky games like Beyond Good & Evil, definately check these out if you haven't already.
Screenshots
More Info: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Little_Big_Adventure_2
There are a bunch of videos on youtube, so if I haven't convinced you - Check out the gameplay and decide for yourself.
I am aware that statistics show many game players are adults. Indeed, a whole generation has now grown up with computer games. It is not surprising that those who enjoyed gaming as children... play electronic games with their own children... 62% of Australians in these gaming households say the classification of a game has no influence on their buying decision...
Given this data, I cannot fathom what State-enforced safeguards could exist to prevent R18+ games being bought by households with children and how children can be stopped from using these games, once the games are in the home. If adult gamers are so keen to have R18+ games, I expect children would be just as keen. I have publically argued that because electronic games are interactive, the violence and other adult content in games have a strong impact. I am particularly concerned about the impact these games have on children, who can spend a lot of their unsupervised leisure time gaming.
It's not even drug abuse though :/. He's takin morphine to cure the pain. It's not like he's smoking crack to get bonus points. It's just like getting a health pack, but using pain killers i.e morphine.The fuck are you talking about?
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you know ax dude one thing i have always wanted to ask is that why do you keep capitalizing random words, you have been doing this for years and it's just really weird.
other than thaaaaaaaaaaaaaat i suppose some of us are just inferior gamer's.......