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Showing posts with label Games. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Games. Show all posts

Sunday, July 21, 2013

Metro Last Light download game full version free.

Metro the last night is one of the best game recommend to you .This game is taking out tremendous world class gaming. We have to take advantages of this game by downloading this game.


Wednesday, July 10, 2013

New Latest Full version Plants vs. Zombies 2 Game free

 Plants vs. Zombies 2:
The long awaited sequel to the popular Plants vs. Zombies game is yet to hit app stores across the globe, but we managed to get our hands on a copy of the game early thanks to Australia getting the game weeks before anyone else.


After playing the game for a fair bit, we can tell why it took PopCap Games so long to push out the sequel to Plants vs. Zombies.

For starters, the Plants vs. Zombies 2: It's About Time moves away from Dave’s front lawn and takes you across time and space, quite literally. After an initial training level (which will be incredibly familiar to those who have played the original game), we find ourselves in ancient Egypt, thanks to Dave’s new friend, a talking time machine named Penny. If you thought Crazy Dave made for some giggles, wait till you hear the conversation between him and his time machine!

As far as the gaming experience goes, there’s a lot of familiarity, a lot has remained unchained and much has changed. Of course that sounds absolutely convoluted, but believe it or not, the Plants vs. Zombies 2 feels incredibly fresh, while maintaining all its familiar elements. You’re still required to protect your house (pyramid/ship etc) using plants as your arsenal from Zombies that just want “BRAINZ.” The mechanism remains the same too, with little sun-pellets being your fuel for planting your protectors.


What has changed, however, are the levels and the zombies. As you move across various time periods and locations in Plants vs. Zombies 2, the zombies morph to reflect that reality. For example, you’ll be fighting Mummy Zombies (every child’s dream come true!) when you’re in 4500BC Egypt. There’s also a Pirate themed map and a map designed after the “Wild-West.” There are also a few new kind of zombies that are much harder to kill, AND they take away your coins and sun-pellets, so you might want to watch out for that.


If you thought that Zombies were the only ones getting a serious upgrade, you’d be wrong. PopCap has also improved the arsenal at your disposal in Plants vs. Zombies 2, introducing not just new kind of plants, but also some enhancements. We played enough to unlock a boomerang shooting plant, which can hit three targets at a time in the same row. It’s pretty cool if you’re pushed against the wall as the regular pea shooters can be a little slow. However, if you don’t have the 175 sun-pellets needed to plant a boomerang flinging plant, you can always turn to “plant medicine,” which essentially super-charges your plant into shooting an insane number of projectiles for a limited duration of time. Absolutely GREAT if you’re outnumbered in a Zombie wave.


Overall, Plants vs. Zombies 2 has addressed one big issue we had with the original: monotony. The sequel changes up game modes, locations and type of zombies attacking you at regular intervals and the mix of all these factors makes for an immensely engaging experience. In fact, we’re having a hard time finishing this first look article because we keep going back to the iPad to play another level or two, and before you know it, the afternoon’s a thing of the past.


Plants vs. Zombies 2 is currently only available in Australia and New Zealand counterparts of the Apple App Store as part of a soft launch effort by PopCap. Senior Producer Allen Murray shared with Polygon that the soft launch was an effort to test much of the new technologies the game is built on. Murray said that “If you're connected to the internet, you can save your progress and share accounts across multiple devices — and we need to make sure those systems, along with our ability to stream that content to players, works." There are ways to get the game if you’re in other regions of the world, but we’ll let you figure those means out for yourself. Do watch out for our full length review of the game coming soon.

Tuesday, February 5, 2013

The 31 best OS X games for Mac

 The 31 best OS X games for Mac

Best OS X games: AI War: Fleet Command

Don't let the relatively simple 2D graphics fool you - this is deep, detailed and agreeably sadistic space-strategy. Dense but rewarding stuff, ideal for you when you feel like going Full Introvert for a weekend.

Best OS X games: Amensia: The Dark Descent

Feel something other than lust for that aluminium oblong of yours: feel fear. Amensia might be an indie game, but it out-horrors pretty much anything from the mainstream in recent years. A deeply menacing adventure filled with puzzles, physics and what may or may not be monsters, it's an essential.

Best OS X games: Avernum: Escape From The Pit

The problem with 'classic' roleplaying games is that, though their stories and depth may be impressive, their user interface and compatibility with modern machines often isn't. The Avernum series is a smart throwback to the early 90s golden days of dungeon-exploring - retaining old-school values and presentation, but slick and intuitive where it needs to be.

Best OS X games: Batman: Arkham Asylum

Opinions are divided as to whether this or its sequel Arkham City is The Best Batman Game Ever, but hey, being spoilt for choice is no bad thing. Our choice is the leaner first game. The Arkham games understand what/who Batman is rather than simply being generic action games starring a guy with funny ears. Stealth, gadgets, scares and dramatic grappling hook-based movement: it might even be the best superhero game ever. Batman: Arkham Asylum review.

Best OS X games: Bejeweled 3

You're almost as likely to have played a Bejewelled game by now as you are to have ever drunk a cup of coffee, but that doesn't undermine how expertly-done these match-3 puzzle games are. The glitzy third game is compulsion incarnate. Bejeweled 3 review.



Best OS X games: Call of Duty 4: Modern Warfare

Call of Duty might rule gaming, but it's a mere bit player on OSX. Recent iterations of the ubiquitous man-shooting series haven't arrived here yet, but frankly it's all been downhill since this one anyway. From back before egos grew out of control, COD 4 offers a moving and shocking singleplayer narrative, backed up by robust and frantic multiplayer first-person shooting. Call of Duty 4: Modern Warfare.

Best OS X games: Civilization V

The classic, history-spanning turn-based strategy series Civilization series has always been good to Mac, so you're spoilt for choice. Civ V is the glossiest and makes bigger departures from the age-old conquer the world by might, politics or science formula than its predecessors, but (whisper it) the older Civ IV might just be the better game. Civilization V review.


We outline the best games for OS X. Here's the 31 best games you can play on your Mac mini, iMac or Macbook.
 Just a few short years ago, any list of best OS X games for Mac would have ground to a halt after a half-dozen half-decade old PC game hand-me-downs. Not any more. While Apple doesn't appear to put half the effort into Macs that they do into iOS, their silver computers' continuing rise has seen a true software explosion in great Mac games in the past couple of years.
Many of the Mac games below are available from the built-in Mac App Store, but if they're not there you'll find them in alternative e-store Steam, whose application is an essential download for even casual OS X gamers.
There's an unbelievable amount of choice now: old and new, mainstream and indie, action and puzzle, sequel and original. In alphabetical order, here are just a few of our most recommended OSX games. See also: The 18 best role-playing games for iPhone and iPad.

Best OS X games: Assassin's Creed: Brotherhood

Most of the four hundred million-part Assassin's Creed stealth/parkour series is available on OSX now, but alas most are also drawn-out and samey exercises in self-indulgence. The one you want is third game Brotherhood, which takes all the best bits of its predecessors, adds a couple of new things and basically turns them into one wild party. Assassin's Creed: Brotherhood review.


Best OS X games: The Binding of Isaac

Twisted, sacrilegious and utterly unforgiving: The Binding of Isaac's dungeons full of mutant babies and Bible satire isn't a game to show granny. At the same time, it's a brilliant remix of 'roguelike' roleplaying games (where death is as inevitable as loot), fusing monster- slaying with high-speed shoot 'em up values. The Binding Of Isaac review.


Best OS X games: BioShock

In an age where shooting games dominate the entertainment industry but appear to only be interested in raising the spectacle, anything that adds intelligence to the wanton violence is to be welcomed. Fortunately BioShock does this in style (thanks to the incredible underwater city it's set in) and doesn't shirk on the action. Literate, evocative, weird, menacing and packing one of the all-time great twists, it's one of the most important videogames of the 21st century. BioShock review.


Best OS X games: Borderlands 2

Proving that OSX can now be right up there with the best of them when it comes to recent blockbuster releases, this almost unbelievably big, brash and noisy shooter is as happy on Mac as it is on console. With a near-infinite number of weapons to collect, approximately 1712 jokes per minute and all the levelling-up and looting compulsion of a good roleplaying game, Borderlands 2 is as spectacular as it is knowingly juvenile. Borderlands 2 review.


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