Posts Tagged ‘games’
The Way to Achieve Success in Mafia Wars – Proven Methods
Building your mafia family in Mafia Wars is one of the first questions you may well ask when you get started trying to play. The aim of the video game is to build up a significant family in order to climb to the top of the mafia society.
Considering that you want to build a good mafia family, you should recruit the ideal mafia participants you could find. You’ll be able to only participate in fight with 501 family members, your odds will probably be much better in case a greater percent of your mafia family were as zealous about the game as you. Your first idea shall be to invite your mates to create your mafia family. It really is a great place to begin but the trouble with this particular system is that I really don’t know many people which have 500 buddys that play the online game. In order to master the game you must recruit outside your circle of friends.
What Console Should You Get?
Sales
If you are basing it on sales alone then it has to be the Wii that gets the prize. However from my opinion (a person who has owned all of the Nintendo Consoles) this has been the worse console that Nintendo have ever made. Why on earth is this?
The major reason why is simply because they do not give a damn about all of the past fans that made them money before the Wii, the majority of new games are aimed at idiots and Nintendo fans rarely see the light of day. Mario Kart Wii was at best disappointing as they seemed to take out everything that made Double Dash good. As well as this they are copying Mario Galaxy by adding in a few variations to levels in Mario Galaxy 2.
The Wii (in my opinion) is certainly out of it already.
Online and other
The Console Argument
Sales
If of course you are looking into sales (which I am not) then Wii comes out on top. This console has easily been their worst yet and this comes from someone who owns all of their previous entries. So why is this?
Well the simple reason is that they have stopped caring about all of the Die hard fans and started to generalise their games for the general market which means we are constantly seeing rubbish games in which a Nintendo fan wouldn’t touch with a 10ft barge pole. with Mario Kart on the Wii that just seemed to take out all of the things that made Double Dash A great game, it has sold because more kids will buy it. As well as this they are copying Mario Galaxy by adding in a few variations to levels in Mario Galaxy 2.
Top Notch Driving Games
There have been ever so many driving games that get released onto our consoles. So many have just come and gone, but there have been few that have stuck around to see it. So lets take a look at some of the driving games around and that have been around.
Mario Kart
Mario Kart and racing has been around all the way from the SNES console, although the game has always stuck to its ways, there have been a few changes over the years. Things such as additional characters, a few extra weapons and most significantly the graphics have improved. Mario Kart is just one of them games that you can literally play hours upon hours, without getting fed up or bored.
Need for Speed
Need for speed is for the hardcore speed players, the races are nonstop. Since the game first hit the market, we have just seen cars get better and better and almost come to life.
Xbox RROD 360 failure
Unfortunately, the Xbox 360 video game console has a number of technical problems that are so common as to be nearly identified with this video game itself. The so-called “red ring of death,” in which three red lights flash on the console, is the most common and famous problem this game console has.
‘Core digital failure’
The ‘red ring of death’ is basically a reporting mechanism that lets the user know that there is a technical malfunction of the hardware or a ‘core digital failure’. It is very possible that receiving this indication means that a ‘fatal error has occurred’. This technical failure rate is reported to be far more common than the electrical goods industry in general, desipte Microsoft’s initial claims of a 2-3% failure rate when the games console was first launched, which would have been within regular industry parameters.