Yearly Archives: 2014

Rising Generals: Closed Beta Now Available

Rising Generals

InnoGames continues their successful franchise with the start of the close beta for their highly anticipated game: Rising Generals. Today, a considerable number of pre-registered players will be able to access and take part of real-time battles for the first time. People should check their emails for beta-keys and activate them through beta.risingenerals.com. The German-game developer will also be allowing access to the beta through various social media pages and lotteries for entries. Additionally, players who have not pre-registered yet can do so now at www.risinggenerals.com to have a chance to get a key. Although the pre-release phase will start with a moderate number of players in the browser version, more players will be allowed gradually while the mobile versions of the game are released in the future.

Rising Generals is a PvP (player versus player) oriented strategy MMO with a Modern Warfare setting. The game is designed for short but intense gaming sessions with a high action focus. There will be no run times for example, but attacks will be executed immediately. Strategic minds have several options to plan them: More than 20 different units from heavy tanks and infantry to helicopters and warplanes have to be chosen and well matched. The game worlds of Rising Generals will have space for up to 40,000 players who can band together in so-called Battle Groups and fight for predominance. Unlockable technologies as well as officers and generals provide helpful bonuses and perks. Real-time 3D animations give each battle a unique feeling and will also provide valuable information about the course of the battle.

For more info, visit www.risinggenerals.com

Dizzel Early Access P90 Assault Rifle Giveaway

Dizzel has begun its Early Access release and OGPlanet wants to make sure that players are unleashing their inner carnage and bloodlust with full force. To kick off Early Access, OGPlanet is giving away a P90 Assault Rifle that not only decimates enemies, it does so in style. So jump into this heart pumping, 8 vs 8 shooter mayhem thrill ride and unleash carnage on your foes.

Dizzel is a hardcore multiplayer third-person shooter developed by Neowiz and published by OGPlanet. Dizzel takes the fast, cover-based gameplay of Gears of Wars while mixing in the freakish brutality of Mortal Kombat.

Dizzel-Early-Access-Giveawa

 

 

To Redeem Your Key:

  • Sign Up for your FREE OGPlanet account.
  • Download the Dizzel Installer.
  • Once Dizzel is installed, login to the game and create your character.
  • Go to Dizzel’s Redemption Page and enter your coupon code.
  • Check your in-game “Storage” to add your items to your inventory.

Tribal Wars 2 Closed Beta Key Giveaway

OnRPG has partnered with InnoGames to get you into the closed beta testing of Tribal Wars 2, the evolution of their flagship strategy MMO, featuring upgraded UI, visuals, and plenty of the tactical goodness that’s hooked gamers for years.

Building on the success of Tribal Wars, the long awaited sequel offers dynamic map information and updates, customizable tribe quests, plenty of alliance and pact features to allow dominant tribes to flourish. Loot your enemies, maximize your castle growth, and hone your battle tactics to create the ultimate tribe!

 

 

 

To Redeem Your Key:

  • Go to www.tribalwars2.com.
  • Register for an account.
  • Enter your code when prompted and you’ll be all set to join the war!

Transformers Universe: Macro and Firebreaker Availble Soon

Transformers

Jagex has confirmed the arrival of fan favorite Autobot Macro into its third-person MOBA game,
TRANSFORMERS UNIVERSE. Macro is joined by his Decepticon peer, Firebreaker, and together these two polarize tactics on the contested battlegrounds of the game.

Macro, in his warrior form, carries a heavy broadsword for up close melee combat which he wields like a chivalrous knight. In addition, his shield dome cloaks all allies within its boundaries, removing them from enemy line of sight for a limited time.

At the other end of the spectrum, Firebreaker is the first Decepticon in TRANSFORMERS UNIVERSE to feature cloaking capabilities. Sacrificing his shield meter he can extend the duration of the cloak, and can also unleash a computer virus on himself that will devastate the first Autobot he comes into contact with.

“From Soundwave to Grimlock, Transformers has always championed diversity and we’ll continue to complement this within our game. As such, the dynamics of the TRANSFORMERS UNIVERSE battlefield will once again shift with the introduction of Macro and Firebreaker, thanks to their distinct combat skills and specialities. Plus, our burgeoning community has been clamoring for Macro for a while now, so it’s fantastic to finally launch him into the game!” said David Nicholson, vice president of TRANSFORMERS UNIVERSE.

Nicholson added, “With over 700,000 Commanders having enjoyed our Beta so far, we’re really excited to see how these new battles pan out. You’d have thought it would be easy to guess the outcome of a contest between snipers and knights, but in TRANSFORMERS UNIVERSE, it’s never certain.”

For more info, visit www.transformersuniverse.com

Stash

Stash is a free-to-play fantasy MMORPG developed by Frogdice for PC, Mac, Linux, and is available for download on Steam. In Stash players can become part of the world of Primordiax, a game world already fleshed out in 6 prior titles developed by Frogdice. Now that the world story has evolved through decades of staff plot lines and the actions of hundreds of thousands of players, once more it can be experienced tabletop style in Stash!

Features:

Player Housing: Stash allows players to build or purchase their own homes throughout the world, filling them with custom-made or prefabricated furniture. Decoration is in-depth and done on a grid system.

Strategic Turn-Based Combat: Battles in Stash require planning, forethought, and strategic execution. Using the right abilities at the right time is integral. Knowing enemies, various weaknesses, and the best synergies is also important.

Mountains of Loot: Stash takes gear acquisition to an extreme. The entire objective of the game is to hoard riches – from gems, coins, equipment, weapons, and even pets. Building a home to house your stash is almost required.

Elite: Dangerous State of the Beta Preview

By Blair Nishkian (Tagspeech)

 

Elite: Dangerous Preview 4

Recently I was assigned by my editor to have a look at a game called Elite: Dangerous, so I could update the community on the game’s progress since the most recent look at the game by one of my colleagues.  I went into this experience knowing absolutely nothing about the game – I never even knew it existed before I was directed to it and invited to explore the beta.  For better or worse, I went into Elite: Dangerous with fresh eyes and no bias for or against the game.  What follows is an accounting of my experiences with it, in its current beta state.

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Anyone who knows me or my reviews can tell you that I’m an immersion freak.  In fact, most of my favorite games are practically simulations.  Given that Elite: Dangerous is built to be as immersive as possible, it stands to reason that this game might quickly become one of my favorites.  But it’s more complicated than that.  With my big monitor and surround-sound setup, do I feel like I’m in the cockpit of an interstellar fighter?  I do.  I can free look around, see all of the controls, even see my own boobs, or the pull of the trigger finger when I fire my weapons.  The entire experience is just utterly rich and engrossing, and for fans of space flight simulators, I imagine the game is abit of a promised land.

 

 

After all, the intentions of the development team behind Elite: Dangerous are to make something with the comparable depth and community espirit d’corps as EVE Online.  That’s a tall order, but the possibilities are fascinating.  EVE is a success, but often what keeps it from being a runaway success is the alienating, cold gameplay that is quite impersonal and difficult to get into, for most people.  Even in its current state, Elite: Dangerous has a far more engaging approach, with gameplay that’s atmospheric, tactical, and action-packed.  It’s a recipe for success.

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There’s just one problem!  In its current state, Elite: Dangerous is extremely difficult to play.  You might be thinking that’s rather the point, it’s a simulation, and not just any, but one that drops you in front of the controls of a complex spacecraft – in space.  That’s just it, unfortunately.  There’s a huge difference between flying on a planet, and flying in space.  In space, there isn’t the constant, reassuring point of reference called the ground.  When you’re upside-down in a jet, you know you’re upside-down and have a much easier time re-orienting yourself.  In space, there’s blackness everywhere, and it’s terribly easy to not only get turned around, mixed-up, and lost, you’re also likely to get a bad case of motion-sickness.  I know I did.  It was not fun.

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Nausea aside, this sort of thing usually gets better with acclimation and practice.  The game has a radar system that’s meant to help you orient yourself and nearby objects better, but I found that it had limited range, was often difficult to read, and left me confused more often than on target.  I hope they put more work into the radar HUD, because it’s absolutely critical to use properly when engaged in dogfights, or even just trying to ram floating containers in the tutorial.  There are ways the game can be made easier to play without sacrificing the spirit of the immersive atmosphere, and beefing up the short-range radar and adding some more positional-marking HUD elements would be huge for that.

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This is just the basic gameplay.  It has promise.  Now, the macro-game is meant to be vast.  Allegedly, Elite: Dangerous wants to add in economic systems, elaborate space stations, large corporations and guilds, a complex law and security system, and plenty more.  I couldn’t really find much of this in my exploration of online play.  What I did find was an endlessly spinning cube that was apparently a space station, and some NPC police cruising around it.  My efforts to ‘dock’ in this space station were initially met with death, since I mistook one of its many nooks and crannies for a docking port.  It was harrowing and hilarious when I got caught in said crannie like a shoe in a washing machine, and was quickly pounded to death by the rotating walls of the space station.

Elite: Dangerous Preview 1

When I respawned, I was inside the station in a new ship – that’s one way to get indoors, I suppose.  I found that the dock was in fact on the topmost part of the station, rotating in a much more gentle motion, and far easier to slip into.  It was a good note for the future.  What followed after that was me spotting a red-marked ship scrapping with the local police.  I thought I’d have some fun and get involved.  What followed was a wild goose chase through the system, with me helping to gun down the outlaw, only to have the police inexplicably turn on me once he was taken care of.  Had I accidentlly shot a police craft?  Were the laws for interfering with police business in this sector punishable by death?  We may never know.  What I do know is that I died trying to flee back into the space station.  It was fun, and a little nauseating.

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I looked far and wide, and couldn’t really find anything else to the game beyond this small area. Perhaps right now the beta is sparsely populated.  I would have loved to pilot different kinds of ships, perhaps something small and nimble, but I couldn’t for the life of me figure out how that was to be done.  I thought about visiting the forums to see if this was all the game had to offer, but that would have killed the point of a glancing review.  So here lies my experience, untainted and pure. The takeaway is that Elite: Dangerous has an incredible base to build on.  What I played felt more like an alpha than a beta, but this could be because there were many features hiding beneath the arcane murk of the game’s starting experience.  Very little is explained.  The single-player tutorials are quite rich, though.  If only there was something to guide you gently into the online portion.