Tag Archives: PlayStation

Managing Your Video Game Backlog

Video Game Backlog

Like most of you, I have a HUGE backlog of video games that I haven’t even touched. Between work and school, I have to fight to make time for gaming. Too many games and not enough time. So there they sit on my bookshelf, neat rows of unopened games still shrink-wrapped in cellophane.

I’m embarrassed to say that I haven’t even opened Call of Duty Black Ops or L.A. Noire. I’d been meaning to, but then Skyrim got in the way. Just as I completed my last quest and was about to tackle the backlog, Farcry 3 came out. Dang! Instead of my backlog growing smaller, it grew larger. And it continues to grow. Larger. And larger…

If I don’t want my living room to be overtaken by Assassin’s Creed and Mass Effect sequels, I need to take action. Here then is my three step game plan (pun intended) on managing my video game backlog:

  1. Buying Video GamesStop buying new games. All right, this seems to be the first, necessary step I have to take in order to manage my video game backlog. Logically, I wouldn’t even have a backlog if I didn’t buy too many games in the first place (duh!). As easy as it sounds though, it’s incredibly difficult for me to go cold turkey on the purchasing front — especially if there’s a hot, critically acclaimed game thats been released or a super bargain (I can’t tell you how many awesome games I’ve scored around Black Friday for under $10). The madness must stop though, and I have control my urge to buy new games.
  2. Sell off the dogs. I’ve got a lot of great games in backlog (The Witcher 2, Gears of War 3, etc.), but I suppose I’ve collected some dogs too (Alpha Protocol, Enslaved, etc.). Granted, because I haven’t even played these games I suppose it’s unfair for me to judge their quality, but I’m going on the opinions of friends and review sites. If I only have a limited amount of time to play video games, why waste time on sub-par titles? By my reckoning, I could sell off at least a quarter of my collection, thereby getting rid of the weak sisters and whittling down the backlog. As a bonus, I’d have some extra cash too. Just have to remember step 1 above…
  3. Skyrim ElfAvoid bottlenecks. As I alluded to earlier, I’d been meaning to work my way through some of my games when Skyrim came out. I was totally stoked for Skyrim, and played the game for over six months straight. During this entire time I was never disappointed, but if I could do it over again, I’d work some other games into the rotation. Yes, I had a blast playing Skyrim, but after a month or so I could have played Alice Madness Returns or Deadspace 2, and then go back to the world of Nords and Dark Elves. This would have kept my game playing fresh, and I would have felt as though I were making good progress at working through my collection.

So how about you? Do you have a video game backlog and if so, what are you doing to manage it?

Review: Duke Nukem Forever

Good of Duke Nukem Forever
Shrinking enemies is the real fun here and stomping on them.

Bad of Duke Nukem Forever
The platform seems boaring and the driving sections is too long. Impact of shooting is not prominent and the visuals are ugly with jerky frame rates. The game is not at all shocking and even funny or sexy.

Duke Nukem Forever Review

The wait is over after the release of Duke Nukem Forever, but it to be a seems unattractive and tedious sci-fi shooter game. Duke may be an icon in the gaming market but this time its is in the category of poorly paced levels.

Many will find the cigar-chomping alpha male in the game as misogynist pic and few may consider it to be a clever and ironic take on macho cliches. The Duke’s action is not liked by crowd and he occasionally spouts with sexist quip. He also gets a topless stripper’s lap dance and uses words starting with “f.” However, nothing provocation or sexy is found in the game. Also there is little joy in it, little fun and little excitement. There are just few occasions where you can get a glimpse of digital nipples and sometimes shoot few brain-dead aliens.

Duke Nukem is mid-1990s video game culture icon that was vulgar, brash and also committed to one-liner art. The new Duke Nukem Forever is not a revitalization of the early days first-person shooter games but it is muddles with hypocritical exercise irritationally with shooting mechanics.

E3 2011 : Assassin`s Creed:Revelations

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After the EA conference followed Ubisoft  at E3 2011 and have presented in detail all the titles currently in development. Assassin’s Creed: Revelations was no exception, of course, and the piece de resistance was the new trailer which, compared with last year for the Brotherhood, was somewhat long, but full of content.
Assassin’s Creed: Revelations released on November 15 on PC, PS3 and Xbox 360.

 

E3 2011 : Battlefield 3 Release Date

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In the Electronic Arts press conference at E3 2011, Karl Magnus Troedsson – General Manager DICE – revealed that the North American release date of the first-person shooter Battlefield Military’s March was set for Oct. 25.

Also, beta testing will begin in September, on all platforms (PC, PlayStation 3, Xbox 360).

 

Press Release

LOS ANGELES – June 6, 2011 – The fight is on! DICE, an Electronic Arts Inc. studio (NASDAQ: ERTS), today announced that Battlefield 3TM, the next installment in the internationally acclaimed Battlefield series, will be available on October 25, 2011. After three years of development, the spectacular new game leaps ahead of the competition thanks to the unique power of the Frostbite TM 2 game engine. The technology advances the state of the art, and serves as the power center that allows Battlefield 3 to deliver superior performance in character animation, visual rendering, audio/sound and physical destruction. Battlefield 3 is the only FPS in the marketplace using Frostbite 2, and the only shooter capable of making the gameplay experience feel alive with all the sights, sounds, movements and action of real-world incursions. Fans eager to jump into battle can join the multi-platform beta in September 2011.

Battlefield 3 will be shown on the PlayStation®3 computer entertainment system and PCthis week at the Electronic Entertainment Expo (E3) in Los Angeles in EA’s booth located at #1601 in the South Hall.

“We are proud to finally open the curtains and reveal Battlefield 3. The core development team has been together since 2005. We’ve grown together, taken some knocks together and now, we’re ready to take first person shooters to a whole new level, together,” said Patrick Bach, Executive Producer. “Like so many gamers out there, we’ve had some pretty wild ideas about what we’d want to see in a shooter. Until now, it was all just fantasy. But with Frostbite 2, even our most far-reaching ideas are becoming a reality.  This is the game we’ve always wanted to create.”