PC & Video Games

Is playing games boring ?

The answer of question above sometimes is yes. Playing games on consoles sometime is as the same as we watch the advertising on tv. It’s like that we had played all kind of games we know, whether is sport games, music games or RPG games. That situation encourage us to find new amusement in order to freshen our brain. Sometimes you got stuck in your adventure games on your console and you can’t do anything about it, unless turn it off and go outside. Well, we need real world at someways and watching something new is one of the solutions.

There are many ways to entertain ourselves. By having David Copperfield Tickets on your hands will enable you to get the amazing magic performance that is inspiring. Music is one of best option, too. Even you will find relaxation in crowd by having Adam lambert tickets and watching his fascinating performance. Don’t like those things? Well, you can go to horsetrack and watch the race and feel the emotion of race competition by ordering Churchill Downs Tickets as your way to go there.

After all those entertainment you will find that your feeling about your game console is now almost the same as when the first time you bought it. To get the best satisfaction in playing games in consoles is by not playing them for sometimes and do our other activities which are fun, too.

Dark Void (PlayStation 3, Xbox 360, Windows)

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Gears of War’s cover system is getting a bit tired these days, so when I heard at E3 that Capcom’s upcoming shooter Dark Void lifts it, I had to stop myself from yawning. But then the developer giving the demo twisted the camera angle to reveal that we weren’t walking down some dark hallway blasting enemies — we were flying up the side of a tower, leaping from cover point to cover point courtesy of a veryRocketeer-ish jetpack.

Moments later, the protagonist leaped off the side of the tower, cutting a beeline toward a wildly maneuvering metal disc. Try as it might, the disc couldn’t get out of his path, and when he alighted on top of the frame, a familiar sequence of button presses popped up just as they might in God of War. Triangle, X, Square and the craft’s pilot had been beaten soundly and thrown from the disc — only to have his ride hijacked, Grand Theft Auto-style, by our hero. Three minutes of gameplay and Dark Void had cemented itself in my mind as the sleeper hit of 2009.

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Warhammer 40,000: Dawn of War II

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For more than two decades, the tabletop game Warhammer 40,000 has captivated countless fans with relentless miniature figurine battles waged between hyper-religious superhuman space fascists, space Orks, space Elves and savage, genetically engineered insect-things that are also from space.

The transition to the real-time strategy genre on the PC went fairly well, but the onset of sequel-itis has left the original Dawn of War looking a bit tired. Fortunately, Relic Entertainment is bringing players back to the basics with Dawn of War II — namely, control of small, elite squads embroiled in close-quarters combat, with a number of traditional RPG mechanics rolled in. Dawn of War’s gleefully excessive brutality and visual flair have been revamped, adding tantalizing levels of detail to the act of vigorously throttling enemy units before hurling them through the air like a large, wet sack. There will also be bits of traditional base-building and resource gathering on the multiplayer side of things, but confess: We’re all really in it for jetpacks and chainsaw-swords.

The Beatles Game

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We don’t know what it’ll look like, how it’ll play or even what it’ll be called. But Harmonix’s collaboration with The Beatles is the odds-on favorite to be the biggest thing to happen to videogames, and maybe even music, in 2009.

The creators of Guitar Hero and Rock Band have turned millions of gamers into faux rockers with plastic instruments, letting non-musicians experience the joy of jamming. And what better way to put on a show in your living room than with the legendary music of the greatest band of all time? Harmonix is forgoing Rock Band 3 this year to concentrate its efforts on re-creating the Fab Four’s music in interactive form. Even if this were just downloadable content for Rock Band, it would be one of the best things to happen this year. As a standalone game, it’ll be unstoppable. (As long as Harmonix includes an option to sing the entire B side of Abbey Road without stopping, I’ll be happy.)