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Toy Story 3 Review

Posted by Mark On June - 18 - 2010 ADD COMMENTS

10 years ago you would probably find me in my house playing with Hot Wheels cars and K’NEX and Nerf guns, and just like Andy, I had a Buzz Lightyear action figure somewhere in my house.  Toy Story was easily one of my favorite movies at the time, I remember when my aunt got me a copy of it on VHS for Christmas.  Now, 10 years later, here I am in college and what is my most anticipated movie of the year?  Well honestly it’s The Expendables, but Toy Story 3 is definitely in the top 3.

Let me first say that I saw the movie in IMAX 3D, which is pretty cool but also not really worth the extra $5.  But once the movie started and I saw the words “Please put on your 3D glasses”  I got pretty excited.  In typical Pixar fashion the movie is preceded by an animated short, this one was called “Night and Day.”  A pretty creative piece that made me smile a few times but nothing really that spectacular.  Then begins the feature presentation and the opening scene is a intense western battle seen through the imagination of a young Andy.  Shortly after we see him all grown up and they start throwing your emotions around immediately.

Pixar really covers all the bases here, the movie is a wild ride and it’s obviously directed at an older audience, while probably enjoyable for kids, there is a lot going on this movie.  It’s genuinely funny, the humor is there, and while I tend to laugh at things that are meant to be sad and otherwise not funny, the parts that are intended as jokes are spot on.

Like Ken, hes flamboyant and prissy and has some really funny moments throughout the film

Like Ken, he's flamboyant and prissy and has some really funny moments throughout the film

There are also some sad parts and there is one part in particular where I was just starring at the screen in completely disbelief and what Pixar was about to do, and had it happened, I would have praised Pixar forever.  On top of that, there is some really scary shit in this movie.  I remember the first one having its moments, but some of the characters and the darkness of them is truly haunting this time around.  If you haven’t seen it yet keep and eye out for Giant Baby, he’s creepy as hell.  Then, to wrap it all up, there are some really pathetic moments like almost every scene involving Andy.  The kid really is just lame, you’re 18 years old man, get a friend.  He brings a picture of himself as a child surrounded by all of his favorite toys to college with him.  Do you know what his room mate is going to when he sees that?  He’s probably going trim some of his pubes off and sprinkle them in Andy’s cereal the next morning.

Toy Story 3 is a really good movie though, I thoroughly enjoyed it.  I’d recommend this movie to almost anyone, but if you’re between the ages of 18 and 25 and enjoyed the first two movies when you were a kid then you have to see this, just don’t bring your kids.  Alright, bring ‘em, but don’t be surprised if they hate their Teddy Bears after.  You heard it here, Toy Story 3 is great.

rating-plate-great

Oh yeah, at the end Woody gets left on the radiator and melts and Andy commits suicide in his dorm room.  Spoiler Alert.

E3 2010

Posted by Mark On June - 16 - 2010 ADD COMMENTS

Holy shit, looks like we hit a time warp guys, we’re still here though.  I’d like to get back into the swing of things with my reactions to this years E3 Press Conferences.

Am I the only one that’s disappointed with the way everything is going?  I mean don’t get me wrong, there were some cool announcements, and I’ll get to those, but let me first say this: Fuck this motion sensing gimmick bullshit.  The Wii sold too well, and now everyone has to jump on the band wagon with their Kinect and light up dildo controllers.  Awesome.  Some one please tell me why I’d want to spend $150 so I can pretend like I’m Tony Stark and move through my dashboard menu’s by waving my hands when I could get 3 AAA games instead.  When it’s 11pm and my family is sleeping I don’t want to jump around my room like a fool to play the newest Street Fighter game, I’d much rather relax in a chair.  That’s what these games are for, aren’t they?  If I want to play baseball I’ll just go outside and do so.  Alright, enough ranting for now, moving on.

Honestly, there really weren’t that many cool things at this years press conferences, sure we’ve got a new Xbox 360 model and the new 3DS, but honestly, I don’t care about any of that.  Where are the games?  From what I’ve seen here are my top 3 previously unannounced titles to get excited about.

1.  Twisted Metal

It’s about damn time Sony.  Twisted Metal Black was the first game I played on PS2 and one of my favorites of all time.  The individual story lines are so grim and awesome, the game play was polished, and the graphics were top notch for the time.  Coming off a game like that how can you not get excited for a brand new Twisted Metal game for the PS3.  It looks like they are really adding a lot this time around too, new game mechanics and flying vehicles are just a start.  Peep the teaser trailer and tell me you are not pumped.


2.  Uncharted 3

Not like anyone didn’t see this coming, but either way, another entry into the Playstation 3’s favorite exclusive series is certainly something to talk about.  Sony announced that the game will release in Fall 2011 with nothing in the way of trailers or screen shots, but really is anyone skeptical?  Just pray that it doesn’t utilize Playstation Move in online multiplayer.

3.  Need For Speed Hot Pursuit

I’ve been saying for years that Hot Pursuit was the last good Need For Speed and with how well Shift did it looked like they were giving up on the arcade racer and attempting to compete with the big dogs of Simulation Racing.  This announcement was a total surprise to me and one that I’m incredibly happy about.  Not only are they going back to their roots but they’ve picked up Criterion Games, the creators of Burnout, to work on it.  Keep an eye on this one, it’s got spunk.


That’s about it, I mean sure you’ve got your Gears of War, Halo: Reach, Mortal Kombat, and what not.  There are plenty of games that will do well in the press and in sales, but nothing I’m really that stoked about.  Oh, except for this:


Bioware, please just make a short movie already.

Have you heard? Sonic is Back!

Posted by Mark On February - 5 - 2010 ADD COMMENTS

So by now you’ve probably heard the news that there is a Sonic the Hedgehog 4 on the horizon, available for all 3 consoles.  What we haven’t heard however is pricing and what the deal is with the episodes.  I’m not unreasonable, I’ll gladly pay $10 or $15 for a brand spankin’ new 2D Sonic Adventure.  However, I won’t pay $10 to $15 for a quarter of a game, or a third, or a half…  What’s the deal with episodic content anyway?  Did anyone ever ask for things to be released that way?  Also, the main villain better be Dr. Robotnik and he better be named Dr. Robotnik, not Eggman.  I guess I’ll have to wait and see what happens, but for the moment being, I’m very excited.  This is exactly what the series needed for the past 10 years.

Oh, and here you go, for anyone who hasn’t seen this little teaser trailer yet.


AVATAR, or, How Cameron Conquered Again

Posted by Anthony On January - 7 - 2010 ADD COMMENTS

I go to the movie theater a lot. Ever since I was a kid, I always found these places to be important in the tiny scheme of things that a kid could see. Before the age of HDTVs and monster home entertainment systems, being taken to the cinema was something special – sitting down in huge, open rooms in rows with hundreds of strangers, being handed sweet and salty snacks that you had to eat before the movie was over (or else my mom wouldn’t bother buying them the next time) while being enveloped by incredible sound and color was nothing short of a spectacle. Then after the movie ends and the bright lights in the lobby melt your eyeballs, reality snaps back into place and you have a realization; so, wait, Flubber really doesn’t exist? There isn’t a Professor that’s as Nutty as that? Mr. Freeze isn’t from Austria?

That wall, that “fourth wall” that forever will divide the audience from the film no matter how hard film makers have tried to truly break through it is what every member of the audience runs straight into when the credits roll and you see how many stunt men it really took to create that awesome action scene. But that is the agreement between those in the chairs and those on the screen; make this suspension from reality worth my eleven dollars and I’ll agree to forget the taxes I still need to get done or the homework I still need to grade, spend insurmountable amounts of money for small bite sized treats and get lost for two or three hours. However, with budgets skyrocketing and box office numbers beginning to block the sun, one has to wonder, where does it all go from here? Where will Hollywood, the clear leader in film production throughout the world, push film making to in order to pull every last dollar from our hands? This question must be asked because in 2010, we’re surrounded by consumable media on every corner of society; instant Netflix, Redbox, video games, and the aforementioned and increasingly affordable home entertainment systems that make leaving your house to pay a third of your mortage to see Bruce Willis shoot someone again sound very, very unappealing.

Ok, so it’s not that expensive to go see a movie, but it’s still a hassle in a down economy…or so I thought. The recent record-breaking numbers coming from Hollywood films have been a product of these recession-like conditions and have sort of turned the movie theater into the best entertainment option in many parts of the country. The days of gawking at movie ticket prices seem to be over (but I will always rage at a $7 bag of popcorn) as the willingness to forget these ugly financial times has never been stronger. As a result, the demand for new ways to experience movies has paralleled the industry’s ticket sales, and with the turn of the new decade, Hollywood has delivered. In a big way.

In comes AVATAR, James Cameron’s decade-long labor of love. Originally planned to more immediately follow Titanic, studios balked at the insane pricetag Cameron slapped on the project, forcing him to shelve it. Well, it goes back further than that; the dude wrote the screenplay in like, two weeks in 1994, because, let’s face it, the story is pretty much lifted from Pocahantas, (which just so happened to come out that same year) but that’s not the point. The point is, Mr. Cameron had this in his head for fifteen years before it materialized into a tangible film in 2009 as he waited for technology to become advanced enough to meet his needs. If you need an example of impatience, look no further than this man, who couldn’t wait any longer for film tech to improve and decided to create his own motion capture equipment to film his own movie with. Damn. So four and a half years of designing, building and filming later, Cameron and the movie industry has given us, in my opinion, the most pronounced turning point in the short history of American films since technicolor. Until AVATAR, 3-D had been treated as a trite gimmick fit perfectly for amusement parks and nothing more, but what Cameron’s film accomplishes is more than just making things pop at you through the screen. Instead, the theater is completely filled with the movie. The cameras he had first hand in developing dissolves the fourth wall, as mid way through watching this, I had lost all track of time and place.

Yeah, this all sounds like I built a massive erection and ejaculated every ten minutes throughout this two and a half hour movie, but it’s an embarrassingly honest reaction. Seeing AVATAR in an IMAX theater is without a doubt the pinnacle of our capacity to make movies as close to reality as possible, and as I sat there watching, I blinked once or twice and began to think just how far this medium had come and how much further it had left. Cameron is using the same technology to release his next film, Battle Angel, in 2011-2012, as I’m sure he’s in absolutely no hurry to return to conventional film making. Perhaps this is going to become conventional film making. Perhaps $15 ticket prices make Hollywood suits smile wide enough to fund $300 million movies more often. The response to this film has been everything the hype had promised and then some – it’s a bonafide global phenomenon, earning, to date, over $735 million outside of the United States.

(a line for an IMAX theater in China. even communists love Cameron.)

I’m excited for the future of movies. I’m excited to see how far 3D will go, and how much more that fourth wall will dissolve. What I was exposed to a few nights ago in that IMAX theater was a movie that represented a new era for film making and a new direction for films. It’s no longer just 3D, it’s the integration of 3D while keeping the art of performance as alive as ever. It not only came a lot closer to perfecting the way three-dimensional films utilize the technology as seamlessly as possible, but it completely blurred the line between digital characters and what we perceive to be real. By the time you are half way into the film, the Na’vi no longer seem like digital animations, but real people – real actors who embody the model and not the other way around. I nerded out big time when this movie ended, the same kind of feeling I used to get going to the theater as a kid. As Roger Ebert said in his review for the film, “Watching “Avatar,” I felt sort of the same as when I saw “Star Wars” in 1977.” Just as Star Wars remains relevant to this day after it revolutionized science fiction, I’m confident that AVATAR will be looked at thirty years from now as the release that forced us to look at the genre differently, as we continue to eat our $7 dollar popcorn.

More Mass Effect Please

Posted by Mark On December - 23 - 2009 ADD COMMENTS

Anyone who knows me also knows that I am a pretty big Bioware fan.  There is good reason to be, most of their games are masterpieces and in my opinion Mass Effect is the best game available on the Xbox 360 so far.  Hopefully that will change with the release of the sequel, and judging by this new trailer I think we can expect a lot.  This trailer was released yesterday on the Xbox Live Marketplace, I’ve already watched it like six times.


I know it’s all CG, but personally I love CG trailers, they’re more epic than gameplay trailers.  It looks like Bioware is making many changes for the better with a new and improved inventory system, a bigger and more interactive Normandy, and whole new team of bad-ass Allies.  Thane and Grunt look like they’re going to make an awesome squad.

Reader’s Choice 2009: Console Game

Posted by Mark On December - 1 - 2009 ADD COMMENTS

Seeing as there is nothing great coming out in the last few weeks of the year it is an appropriate time to vote for this years Reader’s Choice Game of the Year.  A lot big titles this year, most of them released recently, and a lot of games you wouldn’t expect to be in the running.

The Winner is:

Call of Duty Modern Warfare 2

Top Ten Xbox Live Games

Posted by Mark On November - 24 - 2009 2 COMMENTS

In light of Modern Warfare 2 being released and being awesome it seemed appropriate to make this list.  These are my Top Ten favorite Xbox Live games since the birth of the service back in November ‘02.  Xbox Live was brilliant when it was first released, allowing console gamers to compete and chat online with friends.  It was also incredibly addicting, and I would play for 10 hours straight and not even realize.  Here are my ten favorite games to ever take advantage of the service.

10.) Return to Castle Wolfenstein: Tides of War

Was this the inspiration for the name of this blog?  OMG No Way!

Was this the inspiration for the name of this blog?  OMG NO WAY!

It’s not so much that this game was particularly good and I’m probably working off of straight nostalgia here but Wolfenstein (pronounce “Wolfy”) held a ton of great experiences.  The game featured 3 game types if I remember right, one saw players trying to recover a set of documents and transmit them while the other team defended, one was an Elimination game type with no respawns and honestly I can’t recall the last one.  Probably because I never played it much.  The game had a lot of character.  It gave players a few choices of classes each with special abilites, the Medic, the Engineer, the Soldier, and the Lieutenant.  The maps we’re interesting with a take on D-Day called “Beach Invasion” that had a fun glitch that allowed players to blow themselves over the wall.  Any one who played this game knows that “Ice” is where it’s at though.  As far as the Xbox Live service goes this game has features that I think should be implemented now, I can’t understand why they aren’t.  The game allowed players to vote to change the map, boot an annoying player, change game-types, and change teams.  Voice masks and nicknames also faded away, what a shame.

9.) Crimson Skies: High Road to Revenge

This game was incredibly refreshing, breaking away from the barrage of first-person shooters that we’re drowning the Xbox.  The game only featured 5 or 6 maps (more were released for download later) but they all played extremely well.  “Chicago” was easily my favorite though, especially for capture the flag.  On a team of 4 you’d have two balanced crafts, like the “Devastator” patrol the center of the map and intercept fast-movers, a “Bulldog” (the fastest plane in the game armed with a machine gun and a big shotgun) make a run for the flag, and you’re defender would be either a “Brigand” or the “Doppelganger.”  Dogfights were intense, especially in some of the faster planes like the “Desert Fox” or “Dust Devil.”  There really isn’t much to this game, it didn’t do anything special, but everything it did do it did right.  Crimson Skies is definitely a hidden gem of the Xbox and thus one of my favorite Xbox Live games of all time.

8.) Splinter Cell: Pandora Tomorrow

Somebody goin get dey azz kickd.

Here’s another game that breaks the mold of the typical Xbox Live shooter.  This game took a lot of risks, restricting teams to only two players.  The spies would try to complete a series of objectives, like stealing documents or accessing a computer, while the mercenaries would defend.  The spies were armed with a non-lethal shock-pistol and were allowed to bring three pieces of equipment with them such as smoke grenades, sticky cams, and a device that would let you listen in on their voice-chat if you shot someone with it.  I’ll never forget using that device and hearing “God damn it, he’s listening to me, I know it.  I know he’s just hiding listening to me.”  The Mercenaries are the complete opposite of the Spies, armed with high powered and very accurate assault rifles, grenade launchers, and trip-mines.  The games were intense.  Playing as the Mercenaries was scary, the spies we’re fast and could easily sneak up behind you and break your neck.  Playing as the spies was stressful, if you were seen, more often then not you were killed immediately.  Sure the game was unbalanced most of the time, and Chaos Theory fixed this, but something about Pandora Tomorrow just made it more fun then it’s successors and it provided many hours of playtime.

7.) Project Gotham Racing 2

Comment with the name of this car and get a special secret prize.

First person to comment stating the name of this car wins a special prize.

Just like Splinter Cell, this game had successful sequels that improved on the formula, but PGR2 always stood out from the crowd.  Walking around the showroom to buy your car with Kudos earned from drifting around every turn on Nurburgring was so cool to me.  The actual racing was great, and it was accessible for almost anyone, but this game really became one of my all time favorites when someone showed me a player-created game type called “Cat and Mouse.”  In an 8-player race you would have 4 teams of 2, each team is comprised of one Mini Cooper (the mouse) and one Cat (which would typically be a car from the Ultimate Class like an Enzo Ferrari or TVR Speed 12).  The point of the game was to get your team’s Mouse across the finish line first by any means necessary.  As the Cat you could simply smash into the other Mini’s, create roadblocks, push your Mini through the straights (which would actually increase the top speed by 30 or 40 mph), and protect you Mouse from other Cats.  This game-type was so much fun and became so popular that it was included as an actual game-type in future iterations.  Still, none of them lived up to PGR2 in my eyes.

6.)  Halo 3

Swords vs. Hammers.  My money is on Swords.

I rank this lower than it’s predecessor simply because by the time this game had released, the untouched formula had become very stale.  If you hadn’t really played Halo 2 though then Halo 3 was a fresh experience, and even more so than that, it’s one of the most polished games around.  Halo 3 presents itself well, everything in the game works, is balanced, and varied.  There’s also 4-player online co-op, which is actually one of the better parts of the game.  There are a ton of game-types and variables, a lot of cool weapons and vehicles, and a nice selection of maps.  One of my gripes with the game though lies with the maps, they’re not as good as Halo 2, and I can’t help but feel like I’m being milked with DLC released every couple months for a premium price.  The game’s hype is it’s own worst enemy here, and if you take it for what it is, it’s still one hell of a game.

5.)  Gears of War

You cant tell me that this is not absolutely awesome

Gears of War was the Xbox 360’s first big smash and it made a great first impression.  The co-op campaign is still arguably one of the best gaming experiences available on the console.  The multi-player was originally shunned for it’s low 8-player maximum, but the formula worked well.  The game only had a few game types and about 8 maps, but they we’re all well laid-out and balanced.  It was gritty and raw, and that was the main appeal.  Everything felt awesome, it made the player feel bad-ass no matter what was happening, and the small teams really called for a lot of communication and team work.  The reason I put Gears 1 on here instead of the sequel is because of a lot of the changes that we’re made.  The second one does not play as smoothly, there are a lot of “cheap” tactics, and even though the Horde mode is awesome, it doesn’t stand up to Left 4 Dead.

4.)  Left 4 Dead

You can include the sequel here too since it’s basically just an expansion pack, but Left 4 Dead made a big splash when it debuted last November.  Valve is a company that always delivers and Left 4 Dead is one of the most intense and visceral co-op experiences you can have.  Teamwork is absolutely necessary, which makes it almost impossible if you do not play with friends.  Hearing the music play when a witch is nearby is haunting, and it’ll take everyone on the team to make sure she’s destroyed without having a chance to kill anyone.  On top of the co-op is the Versus mode, which pits 4 survivors against 4 special infected as well as A.I. controlled hordes of zombies.  Again, teamwork is absolutely necessary, as the special infected are pretty much useless solo, but you can make some very effective traps if you communicate with your team.  This is a formula that is going to be around for years, hopefully it stays fresh.

3.)  Halo 2

I played Halo 2 pretty much every night for the better part of a year, and continued to play every now and again for an additional year or so.  This is easily one of the longest lasting console games of all time.  I remember seeing at least 15 people on my friends list everyday when this game was released, there was so much to do and all of it was fun.  The match making system was revolutionary and the amount of customization for player-created game-types was outstanding and even still there were game-types that were made up beyond what the game allowed.  “Zombies” is another example of a player-created game type that became so popular it was hard-coded into the sequel.  There were some dark times too, where cheating and hacking became a huge issue, but with the great support from Microsoft and Bungie all of the major problems were fixed fairly quickly.  Honestly I don’t even want to know how many hours I’ve clocked on this game, it’s probably disgusting, but few games deserve the attention more than Halo 2.

2.)  Call of Duty Modern Warfare 2

Yeah, that’s right.  My second favorite Xbox Live game of all time was released only 2 weeks ago.  This spot would have gone to the first Modern Warfare but the second one is better in every aspect, at least when talking about multi-player.  This game strikes a wonderful balance between realism and fantasy that makes it fun without being over-the-top.  The match making system is the best out there and it’s a mystery why every game doesn’t use it, it’s flawless.  The game sports a great selection of game-types, although there are no customization options.  The leveling system is what keeps the game fresh.  When you first start playing and you have a good match, unlock a challenge or two, there are explosions going off every where along with some searing guitar solo’s and you can’t help but get a chubby.  Teamwork is big in this game, although one man can turn the tides, the team that works together usually wins.  The guys at Infinity Ward have done a great job creating and refining this formula and hopefully it’ll last a while.

1.)  Rainbow Six 3

Surprised?  You shouldn’t be.  Rainbow Six has been a staple in the tactical FPS genre forever and the third installment was really something special.  Featuring something like 30 or 40 guns was unprecedented at the time (and is still somewhat impressive), and each one was useful in its own right.  The teamwork and strategy involved in this game was masterful, seeing as it was so easy to die.  This was one of the last great games to include a health bar, ever since Halo 2 regenerating health has become the new standard.  However, I think my single favorite part about this game is the map selection.  Every map had a certain character to it, and every player had their own favorite and plan of attack between the “Suicide Hallway” on Airport 1 to the “Wiener Corner” on Warehouse.  On top of that, new maps were released every so often and, get this, they were completely free.  FREE!  The stand-alone expansion, Black Arrow, was just as good and added a built in clan system (and no, not lame ass clan tags but scheduled clan matches) and some great new game-types like Total Conquest (see Call of Duty’s Domination mode).  This game was terrific and made me really proud to be a member of Xbox Live.  On top of the exquisite competitive multi-player there were also two co-op modes that could be played with 4 players and we’re insanely intense on hard.  Between Rainbow Six 3 and Black Arrow this game effectively lasted me almost 2 years, too bad the follow up, Rainbow Six: Lockdown, was the biggest piece of shit ever to grace my Xbox.


Modern Warfare 2 Review

Posted by Mark On November - 19 - 2009 ADD COMMENTS

Alright, almost everyone should be aware that Modern Warfare released last week, and what a release it was.  Nearly every game store in my area had lines out the door, midnight launches with over 200 customers lined up, and another couple hundred reservations.  Needless to say I got my copy and have been playing the game religiously since last Tuesday (hence the lack of updates).  The game is absolutely awesome.  Period.

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It’s great, there, done.  That’s the short story.  Really though this game is exactly what a sequel is supposed to be, bigger, better, and more engrossing.  The campaign is a direct sequel to the first Modern Warfare picking up only a few years where that one left off.  I’m not going to get into details in fear of spoiling anything for anyone but you will play as a U.S. Army Ranger and a member of the British Task Force 141.  Every mission is fun to play, engaging, and interesting.  You’ll find your self gunning from and even driving a handful of vehicles this time around and for once it doesn’t feel tacked on (I’m looking at you, Gears of War).  The campaign is on the short side, I beat it on Hardened in less than 6 hours, but it’s 6 hours of non-stop action.  There also isn’t much replay value in the single player aside from higher difficulties, but then again the single player is only a small portion of the whole game.

One of the best new additions is the Special Ops mode, a two-player co-op that takes you through a series of increasingly more challenging missions that have barely anything to do with the overall story arc of the game.  They start out somewhat easy and very short and progressively get harder and more in depth, which makes them a great way to get better at the game.  They also make for good “jump-in” gaming when you only have 15 or 20 minutes to play, you can do a couple Special-Ops missions with your best bud and then be on your way.  Be prepared to get frustrated though as you get towards the top tier of missions, they will really test your skill and patience.

Now, the pièce de résistance, the multiplayer.  The multiplayer is, without a doubt, the most robust, featured, and well-rounded experience available on any platform this generation.  You have a wide array of game modes ranging from the ever popular Team-Deathmatch and Capture the Flag, to massive battles of 18 players in Ground War, limited respawn game types, and even 3rd person versions of a couple game types.  A quick aside about the 3rd person here, it is surprisingly well done and gives the feeling of a Ghost Recon or SOCOM style, so veterans of those games will likely feel at home.

The customization this time around is also more ambitious, each gun has nice variety of attatchments, each perk can be upgraded to offer additional benefits, and you can also customize your kill streak rewards.  All these additions nearly ensure that no two players will be using the same equipment, which allows for some really good team work.  You can have a player on your team with a silenced sniper rifle, who will get a UAV after 3 kills, a played using radar-jammers and a heartbeat sensor raking up the kills to call in a Stealth Bomber, and a commando player on the frontlines consistently calling in Predator Missiles.

Kill streaks have become the showcase of the game, the higher level ones being game changing such as the Chopper Gunner and AC130 which have the ability to keep enemies pinned indoors while continuously adding kills to the scoreboard.  Couple these will a few Harrier Air Strikes and a Pavelow and it makes the game complete chaos for the opposing team.  The game strikes a wonderful balance though, because it offers players the option to bring a selection of anti-aircraft missile launchers into battle to deal with these destructive flying death-machines.

If you liked the first Modern Warfare your gauranteed to enjoy this one, and if you found the first one too annoying or difficult, Modern Warfare 2 is much more accessible.  With added death streak rewards, perks like Hardline that allow you to get kill streak rewards earlier, and Riot Shields, the game can become a fun experience for even the worst FPS players.  This game is a must buy, it has only exceeded my expectations and it will be spinning in the disc tray of my Xbox for months to come.  One more time for dramatic effect:

rating-plate-great

Them Crooked Vultures Official First Single

Posted by Mark On October - 26 - 2009 1 COMMENT

Alright, I know I just posted about this group 3 days ago but I’m too excited about this album.  So you know when it releases, here’s the first official single to get an idea of what it sounds like.


I don’t know about you guys, but I love it, and I absolutely can not wait until the 17th to pick this gem up.  I think this may be the first “super group” that I’ll actually enjoy listening to.  Also, a side note, Minus The Bear will be releasing their new single digitally tomorrow which will include both “Into the Mirror” and the b-side “Broken China.”  Count me in.

The Expendables- Trailer

Posted by Monahan On October - 18 - 2009 1 COMMENT

There are more badasses in this movie than…I can’t really think of anything to compare it to, but expect it to blow your mind. You should just know this film has more badasses than any in history. I’ll let the names and trailer do the talkin.

Sly Stallone, Jason Statham, Jet Li, Dolph Lundgren, Terry Crews, Randy Couture, Stone Cold! Steve Austin, Eric Roberts, Mickey Rourke


YouTube - Link

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