Monday, September 14, 2009

How to get the most fun out of GTA IV.



GTA IV is a GREAT game. You can play for hours and hours and not getting bored. Ok here I'll tell you some things that will keep you wanting to play gta iv more.

- Replay the story ( if you already beat the game) and try to do different things in the plot( like killing someone else) and see what new things happen.

- Mess up with the whole city, cause rampage police chases.

- Run over people and see how they react to how you hit them.

- Multiplayer, Deatchmatch is fun just keep getting good at it and you will become a great player.

Mystery missions
Every so often, a mysterious 'person' icon will appear on your map. The character you meet varies, but they'll usually have a mission for you - or even free money. Some characters only appear depending on your live/die decisions in missions. One girl is being beaten by her brutish boyfriend and Niko can offer to 'help' in the usual way. Another excellent mystery mission-giver is Jeff, a paranoid maniac who's convinced his wife is cheating on him. Worth completing if only to see how it all ends. Funny, eh?


Outrun the cops on flats
Why not try outrunning the cops on a motorbike with no tyres? Just shoot up your hog, hop on and see how far you can go without braking. Our record? About five seconds. It's easier in a car, to be honest.

Crush people with the Jetmax
There's more fun to be had with the cheats than just pretending you're in The Matrix, calling up a vehicle and driving away. Such as repeatedly calling up a boat in the middle of a busy street.

Now you see him. Now you see him. Now you... oh, wait a minute, it's a her. And she's been felled not by a fellow motorist, but by... yep, another boat.

Take a leap of faith
First you need to spawn a police helicopter. There's no point finding a legit one as you'll need a cheat once you get to the top anyway.
Now it's just a case of dusting yourself off, calling up a bike and getting on. At the top of a high rise building. Maniac.

Suddenly the vertigo kicks in and you feel yourself being pulled towards the edge. Just don't look down - at least you've got your helmet on

Suicide long jump
All you need for this is a rocket launcher (use the weapons cheat if you must), and somewhere to measure your death distance. Compete against your friends - all you need to do is fire at the ground in front of you. Now see how far Niko flies through the air. The most violent, yet graceful, death we've ever seen.


Do some drfting
Go at fast speed over the streets and drift over hard curves, Its fn and challenging!

Explore the whole city

Look at how the peds react

Follow the peds!

beat them with your bat! ( haha that is funny)

Do crazy stunts!

Dont do the pigeons, they suck!

Thank you!

Msg me if you want more and follow me for up to date info.!

5 Biggest Game Console Battles

5 Biggest Game Console Battles
A look back at the five most important console wars in the history of the gaming industry

PlayStation vs. Xbox, Nintendo vs. Sega, Game Boy vs. Everyone -- Console Wars are a historical tradition among gamers, and GamePro is looking back at the five most important battles in the history of the gaming industry!

#5. Sony PlayStation vs. Nintendo 64 vs. Sega Saturn



Did the Sony PlayStation simply have a better lineup of games than Nintendo? Maybe. Should Sega have spent more time in the laboratory with the Sega Saturn instead of wasting three years building clunky add-ons to the Genesis? Probably. Was falling behind in the console race Nintendo's fault? Who knows? But by the end of 1999, everyone knew that the Sony PlayStation was the biggest of the bunch, and it had long since left everyone else in the dust.


Even though Nintendo was churning out smash hit after smash hit -- Mario 64, Ocarina of Time, GoldenEye 007, StarFox 64, and even Perfect Dark -- the PlayStation had a simple solution for hitting the Big N right between the eyes: the Compact Disc.

It turns out that abandoning the old cartridge-format for the CD made all the difference in Sony's first strike against Nintendo, as developers found the CD format a LOT easier to produce and distribute. Of course, it also helped that less honest gamers quickly figured out how to burn PS1 games on the cheap, which led to some wide-spread piracy. It didn't matter as far as Sony's newfound deathgrip on the video game market was concerned, though, selling million upon millions of copies with relatively little effort.

The Sony PlayStation happened to have plenty of good games under its belt, including a few little titles like Crash Bandicoot, Metal Gear Solid, a dozen Tomb Raiders, Tekken, Gran Turismo -- and let's not forget Final Fantasy; Square Enix dumped Nintendo shortly after the SNES era (probably because they couldn't title the games in any intelligent order) and found a new audience with Sony's PS1.

It was like beating Michael Jordan in a slam dunk contest with a broken arm -- the PlayStation had killed Nintendo's home console dominance, and they wouldn't be letting go of it for a good 10 years.

The Victors: Sony, who proved that new technology and a fresh attitude could make a console the new King of the Hill.

The Casualties: NEO-GEO, the Atari Jaguar, and video game arcades in general finally had to give up the ghost, as the technology race suddenly got too narrow (and expensive) for anyone whose name wasn't Sony and Nintendo.

The Fallout: Beating Nintendo at their own game and outright maiming Sega's underpowered Saturn, Sony helped lay the groundwork for the next decade of gamer loyalty and subsequent console warfare

#4. Nintendo DS vs. Sony PlayStation Portable




Everyone expected Sony's new, hand-size PlayStation to trounce Nintendo's weird looking dual-screen second cousin of the Game & Watch. It didn't happen. Today, Nintendo's required by Federal Law to hold their DS releases until weekends in Japan, since children will ditch school for days to pick up any Mario-, Zelda or Dragon Quest title. Heck, even Nintendogs sold millions of copies, and it looked plain silly sitting next to Animal Crossing, Tetris and Pokemon.

Of course, Sony didn't do itself any favors with the most horrible marketing blitz known to mankind. From jive-talking squirrels to sexy European models face-masking black people, Sony's ads for the PSP played out like a train wreck in bullet time. You couldn't make bad press like this if you shot the Pope and played the bongos with his head.

Also, UMDs never really picked up, and load times on most games were horrendous. That disc drive on the PSP sounded like trucks downshifting on raw gravel. Still, you have to give Sony credit for sticking to its less successful, socially awkward child. To this day, the PSP still commands a healthy market share in the portable gaming world, and downsized, slightly cheaper versions of God of War, Tekken and Metal Gear are nothing to sneeze at. Even games like LocoRoco and Patapon have their cult fan followings.

The Victors: Casual gamers, who picked up the DS and finally found out what all this video game nonsense was about.

The Casualties: Sony's brand image, which went from simply being weird in the PS2 era to just getting outright embarrassed in their desperation to outperform the Nintendo DS.

The Fallout: Sony's actively trying to reinvent the PSP for its nebulous demographic, while the DS is still printing money, with 100 Million sold today.

#3. Game Boy/Game Boy Color vs. Sega Game Gear




In reality, Sega's Game Gear had every reason to beat the Game Boy. They had color graphics, Sonic the Hedgehog, and an ad campaign that would put the Obama Administration to shame. It still didn't help though, as the Game Boy continued to sell like hotcakes despite its "creamed spinach color" scheme. Also, Nintendo threw a left hook out of freaking nowhere with the Game Boy Pocket, and later, the Game Boy Color.

By the numbers, most gamers also refused to pay $150 for a portable gaming system in the 90s. That, and the Sega Game Gear probably generated more toxic waste than Nickelback's latest "rock" concert tour, using a whopping six AA batteries. SIX. Even the Game Boy's four battery set up got 10 hours of life, while Sega's Game Gear could barely manage FIVE. (Even a ten-year-old could figure out the better deal.) Nintendo also wised up after the first Game Boy and scaled the Pocket down to just two batteries, making the Game Boy a must-have for kids that wanted to play it loud in math class.

Oh. And Pokemon happened. That was kind of a big deal, too.

The Victors: Parents, who could finally send their kids outside to play, even if it just meant sitting in the grass, playing video games in the shade.

The Casualties: The Neo Geo Pocket Color, the Bandai Wonderswan Color, and every other company that tried to cash in on the Game Boy's success.

The Fallout: Nintendo still hasn't been dethroned as the de facto marketer of handheld gaming, although good titles are becoming increasingly rare with every cycle of Bratz games

#2. Sony PlayStation 2 vs. Xbox vs. Nintendo GameCube



With Microsoft coming out of the woodwork for a piece of the gaming industry pie, Sony and Nintendo suddenly found themselves in a Mexican standoff for most of 2000 through 2006.

Part of the problem with determining the better system (initially), was the fact that everyone had something someone else wanted. Nintendo had Mario and better graphics, Sony had millions of people still in love with the original PlayStation, and Microsoft had an online gaming service that made gamers forget PCs ever existed. Also, each console had specs that warranted plenty of multi-console releases, as third-party developers mastered the art of the "open relationship"
What eventually made the difference was Sony's huge install base, which pretty much trumped Microsoft's late arrival to the dance. They were also smart enough to market the PS2 as a cheap DVD player, while Nintendo insisted they only wanted to make a gaming console. In the next generation, though, everything would get turned on its head, as the Nintendo Wii is currently beating the snot out of everyone else.

The Victors: Sony's PS2 and third-party developers, who still make games for the system to this day (although far too many of them suck, being shovelware).

The Casualties: The Sega Dreamcast, despite having a two-year start on all the other consoles. While plenty of Sega fans still lament its demise, the Nintendo/Sega rivalry effectively died here. Also, both companies are kind of in bed together, with Nintendo squarely on top.

The Fallout: The Age of the Fanboys gained a ton of steam in this generation, as the purity of console loyalty got watered down to a perpetual mud fight that went from couches to Internet forum boards to frat house bathrooms -- although it was worth it just for the PS2 commercials by David Lynch.

#1. Super Nintendo vs. Sega Genesis




Coming off a decidedly lopsided "war" against the original Nintendo Entertainment System, Sega took their lumps from backing the overmatched but gutsy Sega Master System. Thanks to the power of the NES's Holy Trinity -- Mario, Zelda and Metroid -- Sega's first console didn't even come close to beating Nintendo in sales. It was like trying to knock out Mike Tyson with a whiffle bat. Still, Sega took strength from its growing fan base and came back with Nintendo's first real threat: the Sega Genesis.

With initial sales in Japan turning up nothing, Sega USA used the success of Sonic the Hedgehog, along with an ad campaign that got more ridiculously campy as time went on, to start turning up the heat on Nintendo. Fans started digging trenches and hurling slogans at each other, while TV commercials told the public that Sega's Genesis could do "What Nintendon't". It was magical, and the war went on and on.

Nintendo, on the other hand, merely touted the merits of their own system, letting smash-hit titles like Super Mario World, Chrono Trigger and The Legend of Zelda: A Link To The Past do the work for them. (It also helped that they had a magazine dedicated to their cause.) While SNES units continued to fly off the shelves with every blockbuster game, Sega was throwing in freebees for people to pick up their own machine. In the end, the 16-bit era had divided gamers for the first definitive time, with Nintendo fans and Sega servants on opposite sides of the fence.

The Victors: Probably the video game industry, with combined sales of roughly 80 Million Freaking Consoles between both systems.

The Casualties: Arcades, which saw a lot of their quarter munchers suddenly saving mountains of pocket change for $50 games.

The Fallout: Super Nintendo pulled ahead in the war, besting Sega by a sizeable amount of units sold and dollars earned. Try as they might, Sega never got remotely close to challenging Nintendo's dominance again, and their consoles didn't sustain much impact after the Sega Genesis faded from shelves. Now Sonic's barely keeping things together, running from console to console, while Mario's still sitting pretty on the top of the Nintendo empire.


By,
http://www.pcworld.com/article/171127-2/5_biggest_game_console_battles.html

Sunday, September 13, 2009

Top five Playstation 3 exclusives coming this fall!


5. God of War: Collection
Two of the best exclusive games on the Playstation 2 will be coming to the Playstation 3 this fall. It won’t be a straight port either as the God of War: Collection comes with several enhancements like 720p resolution with anti-aliasing and 60 frames per second support in addition to the added trophy implementation. So if you haven’t played God of War or God of War II, God of War: Collection is one exclusive Playstation 3 game you can’t miss on the Playstation 3, especially since it only costs $39.99.

4. Ninja Gaiden Sigma 2
Although it is based on the Xbox 360 game, Ninja Gaiden II, Ninja Gaiden Sigma 2 on the Playstation 3 does have plenty of exclusive content like new bosses, gameplay tweaks and playable characters. Furthermore, this exclusive game will also have online co-op for two players. With enhanced visuals to boot, Ninja Gaiden Sigma 2 is shaping up to be a stellar experience.

3. Demon's Souls
Already a hit in Japan, Demon's Souls will be bringing its punishing difficulty to North America this fall exclusively on the Playstation 3. The action role-playing features a deep and engrossing world filled with some deadly creatures. It also has several unique online features where players can leave messages, fight together or battle against each other. With the Playstation 3 lacking in games from the role-playing department, Demon's Souls is a must buy for fans of the genre.

2. Ratchet & Clank Future: A Crack in Time
The popular Ratchet & Clank series can always be counted on for delivering a fun-filled experience. Ratchet & Clank Future: A Crack in Time is shaping up to be the best game yet. In addition to breathtaking graphics, the latest title features more varied gameplay including new Clank and space exploring segments. Add in plenty of replayability and you have one of the best exclusive games on the Playstation 3 coming this fall.

1. Uncharted 2: Among Thieves
Uncharted: Drake’s Fortune remains one of the best exclusive games on the Playstation 3 today. Two years later, Uncharted 2: Among Thieves is looking like it will be a massive improvement to the already excellent original. In addition to the incredible graphics and epic single-player player, the sequel also introduces competitive and co-operative online modes. Uncharted 2: Among Thieves is easily the best exclusive game on the Playstation 3 coming this fall.

PS3 Upcoming titles!

1. Madden NFL 10 - PlayStation 3
Release: Aug. 14th, 2009
Developer: EA Tiburon
Genre: Sports
Also on: X360, Wii, PS2, PSP

2. Wolfenstein - playstation 3
Release: Aug. 18th, 2009
Developer: Raven, iD Software
Genre: WWII / Horror FPS
Also on: X360, PC

3. Batman: Arkham Asylum - PlayStation 3

Release: Aug. 25th, 2009
Developer: Rocksteady, Eidos
Genre: First-Person Shooter
Also on: PC, X360

4.Guitar Hero 5 - PlayStation 3

Release: Sep. 1st, 2009
Developer: Activision / Neversoft
Genre: Rhythm / Music
Also on: X360, Wii, PS2

5. Mini Ninjas - PlayStation 3
Release: Sep. 8th, 2009
Developer: Io Interactive
Genre: Action Adventure
Also on: X360, PC, Wii, DS

6. DiRT 2 - PlayStation 3
Release: Sep. 8th, 2009
Developer: Codemasters
Genre: Rally Racing
Also on: X360, PC, Wii, PSP, DS
7. The Beatles: Rock Band - PlayStation 3
Release: Sep. 9th, 2009
Developer: Harmonix
Genre: Rhythm / Music
Also on: X360, Wii

8. WET - playstation 3

Release: Sep. 15th, 2009
Developer: Sierra, Artificial Mind
Genre: Action
Also on: X360

9. Need for Speed: Shift - PlayStation 3
Release: Sep. 15th, 2009
Developer: Slightly Mad / EA Games
Genre: GT Racing
Also on: PC, X360, PSP

10. Marvel Ultimate Alliance 2 - PlayStation 3
Release: Sep. 15th, 2009
Developer: Vicarious Visions
Genre: Sci-Fi Action RPG
Also on: X360, Wii, PS2, DS, PSP

11. NHL 10 - PlayStation 3
Release: Sep. 15th, 2009
Developer: EA Canada
Genre: Sports
Also on: X360

12. IL-2 Sturmovik: Birds of Prey - PlayStation 3
Release: Sep. 15th, 2009
Developer: Gaijin / 505 Games
Genre: Flight Simulator
Also on: X360, PSP, DS

13. NHL 2K10 - PlayStation 3
Release: Sep. 15th, 2009
Developer: 2K Sports
Genre: Sports
Also on: X360, Wii

14. Tornado Outbreak - playstation 3
Release: Sep. 15th, 2009
Developer: Konami / Loose Cannon
Genre: Action
Also on: X360, Wii

15. Katamari Forever - playstation 3
Release: Sep. 22nd, 2009
Developer: Bandai Namco
Genre: Action
Exclusive PS3 Release

16. Afrika - playstation 3
Release: Sep. 22nd, 2009
Developer: Natsume
Genre: Adventure
Exclusive PS3 Release

17. Heroes Over Europe - PlayStation 3
Release: Sep. 22nd, 2009
Developer: Transmission Games
Genre: Flight Sim
Also on: X360, PC

18. Ninja Gaiden Sigma 2 - PlayStation 3

Release: Sep. 29th, 2009
Developer: Tecmo; Team Ninja
Genre: Action
Exclusive PS3 Release

19. SAW: The Video Game - playstation 3

Release: Oct. 6th, 2009
Developer: Konami / Zombie
Genre: Horror Action
Also on: X360

20. Operation Flashpoint 2: Dragon Rising - playstation 3
Release: Oct. 6th, 2009
Developer: Codemasters
Genre: Tactical Shooter
Also on: PC, X60

21. Demon's Souls - playstation 3
Release: Oct. 6th, 2009
Developer: Atlus
Genre: Role-Playing Game
Exclusive PS3 Release

22. Rogue Warrior - PlayStation 3
Release: Oct. 6th, 2009
Developer: Bethesda, Zombie
Genre: Modern Tactical Shooter
Also on: X360, PC

23. Star Wars the Clone Wars: Republic Heroes - PlayStation 3
Release: Oct. 6th, 2009
Developer: LucasArts
Genre: Sci-Fi Action
Also on: X360, Wii, PC, PS2, DS, PSP

24. NBA Live 10 - playstation 3
Release: Oct. 6th, 2009
Developer: EA Canada
Genre: Sports
Also on: X360, PSP

25. NBA 2K10 - PlayStation 3
Release: Oct. 6th, 2009
Developer: 2K Sports
Genre: Sports
Also on: X360, PC, Wii, PSP, PS2

26. Uncharted 2: Among Thieves - PlayStation 3

Release: Oct. 13th, 2009
Developer: Naughty Dog / SCEA
Genre: Action Adventure
Exclusive PS3 Release

27. Brutal Legend - PlayStation 3

Release: Oct. 13th, 2009
Developer: Double Fine, Vivendi
Genre: Action
Also on: X360

28. Way of the Samurai 3 - playstation 3
Release: Oct. 13th, 2009
Developer: Acquire
Genre: Action Adventure
Also on: X360

29. Borderlands - playstation 3
Release: Oct. 20th, 2009
Developer: 2K Games, Gearbox Software
Genre: Sci-Fi FPS / RPG
Also on: X360, PC

30. FIFA Soccer 10 - PlayStation 3
Release: Oct. 20th, 2009
Developer: EA Sports
Genre: Sports
Also on: x360, PC, Wii, PS2, DS, PSP

31. WWE Smackdown vs Raw 2010 - PlayStation 3
Release: Oct. 20th, 2009
Developer: THQ
Genre: Sports
Also on: X360, Wii, PS2, PSP

32. Tekken 6 - PlayStation 3

Release: Oct. 27th, 2009
Developer: Namco Bandai
Genre: 3D Fighting
Also on: X360, PSP

33. Ratchet & Clank Future: A Crack In Time - playstation 3

Release: Oct. 27th, 2009
Developer: SCEA / Insomniac Games
Genre: 3D Platformer
Exclusive PS3 Release

34. Alpha Protocol - playstation 3
Release: Oct. 27th, 2009
Developer: Sega, Obsidian
Genre: Role-Playing
Also on: X360, PC

35. DJ Hero - playstation 3
Release: Oct. 27th, 2009
Developer: FreeStyle Games / Activision
Genre: Rhythm / Music
Also on: X360, Wii, PS2

36. This is Vegas - PlayStation 3
Release: Nov. 2nd, 2009
Developer: Surreal, Midway
Genre: Action Adventure
Also on: X360, PC

37. Blur - PLAYSTATION 3
Release: Nov. 3rd, 2009
Developer: Bizarre Creations
Genre: Racing
Also on: PC, X360

38. LEGO Rock Band - PlayStation 3
Release: Nov. 3rd, 2009
Developer: TT Games / Warner Bros.
Genre: Rhythm / Music
Also on: X360, Wii, DS

39. Band Hero - playstation 3
Release: Nov. 3rd, 2009
Developer: Activision
Genre: Rhythm / Music
Also on: X360, Wii, PS2, DS

40. Call of Duty: Modern Warfare 2 - playstation 3

Release: Nov. 10th, 2009
Developer: Infinity Ward
Genre: First-Person Shooter
Also on: X360, PC

41. Dragon Ball: Raging Blast - PLAYSTATION 3
Release: Nov. 10th, 2009
Developer: Namco Bandai
Genre: 3D Fighting
Also on: X360

42. Fairytale Fights - PLAYSTATION 3
Release: Nov. 10th, 2009
Developer: Playlogic
Genre: Action
Also on: PC, X360

43. Assassin's Creed II - PlayStation 3
Release: Nov. 17th, 2009
Developer: UbiSoft Montreal
Genre: Stealth Action-Adventure
Also on: PC, X360

44. Dragon Age: Origins - playstation 3
Release: Nov. 17th, 2009
Developer: BioWare
Genre: Role-Playing Game
Also on: PS3, PC

45. Tony Hawk: Ride - playstation 3
Release: Nov. 17th, 2009
Developer: Robomodo
Genre: Sports
Also on: X360, Wii

46. LEGO Indiana Jones 2: The Adventure Continue... - playstation 3
Release: Nov. 17th, 2009
Developer: Traveller's Tales
Genre: Action Adventure
Also on: X360, Wii, PC, PSP, DS

47. Planet 51 - playstation 3
Release: Nov. 17th, 2009
Developer: Pyro Studios, SEGA
Genre: Movie-based Action
Alson on: X360, Wii, DS

48. James Cameron's Avatar: The Game - PlayStation 3
Release: Nov. 24th, 2009
Developer: Ubisoft
Genre: Movie-based Action
Also on: X360, Wii, PC, PSP, DS

49. MX vs ATV Reflex - PlayStation 3
Release: Dec. 1st, 2009
Developer: Rainbow Studios
Genre: Off-Road Racing
Also on: Also on: X360, PSP, DS

50. The Saboteur - playstation 3
Release: Dec. 8th, 2009
Developer: Pandemic Studios
Genre: WWII Action Adventure
Also on: PC, X60

51. Guitar Hero Van Halen - PLAYSTATION 3
Release: Dec. 22nd, 2009
Developer: Neversoft
Genre: Rhythm / Music
Also on: X360, Wii, PS2

52.Highlander - PlayStation 3
Release: Q4 2009
Developer: WideScreen, Eidos
Genre: Action
Also on: X360, PC

53. PES 2010 Pro Evolution Soccer - playstation 3
Release: Q4 2009
Developer: Konami
Genre: Sports
Also on: Also on: Wii, X360, PS2, PSP

54. Army of Two: The 40th Day - playstation 3
Release: Jan. 12th, 2010
Developer: EA Montreal
Genre: Modern Shooter
Also on: X360

55. Dark Void - PlayStation 3
Release: Jan. 12th, 2010
Genre: Capcom, Airtight Games
Genre: Action
Also on: X360, PC

56. MAG: Massive Action Game - playstation 3
Release: Jan. 26th, 2010
Developer: SCEA / Zipper
Genre: Massive Online Shooter
Exclusive PS3 Release

57. Bayonetta - PLAYSTATION 3
Release: January 2010
Developer: Sega
Genre: 3D Fighting
Also on: X360

58. Darksiders: Wrath of War - playstation 3
Release: January 2010
Developer: Vigil Games / THQ
Genre: Sci-Fi Action Adventure
Also on: X360

59. Split / Second - playstation 3
Release: Feb. 16th, 2010
Developer: Black Rock Studio
Genre: Action / Driving
Also on: PC, X360

60. Lost Planet 2 - playstation 3
Release: Feb. 21st, 2010
Developer: Capcom
Genre: Sci-Fi Shooter
Also on: X360

61. Max Payne 3 - playstation 3
Release: Feb. 26th, 2010
Developer: Rockstar Vancouver
Genre: Modern Shooter
Also on: X360, PC

62. Mafia II - playstation 3
Release: Feb. 28th, 2010
Developer: 2K Games, 2K Czech
Genre: Action Adventure
Also on: PC, X360

63. Dead to Rights: Retribution - playstation 3
Release: Feb. 28th, 2010
Developer: Volatile Games, Namco Bandai
Genre: Modern Shooter
Also on: X360

64. Aliens vs. Predator - playstation 3
Release: February 2010
Developer: Rebellion, SEGA
Genre: Sci-Fi Action
Also on: X360, PC

65. Battlefield: Bad Company 2 - playstation 3
Release: Mar. 2nd, 2010
Developer: EA DICE
Genre: Modern First-Person Shooter
Also on: X360, PC

66. God of War III - PlayStation 3
Release: March 2010
Developer: SCEA
Genre: Action
Exclusive PS3 Release

67. Singularity - playstation 3
Release: Q1 2010
Developer: Raven Software, Activision
Genre: First-Person Shooter
Also on: X360, PC

68. BioShock 2 - playstation 3
Release: Q1 2010
Developer: 2K Games, 2K Marin
Genre: Sci-Fi First-Person Shooter
Also on: X360, PC

69. Just Cause 2 - playstation 3
Release: Q1 2010
Developer: Eidos
Genre: Action Adventure
Also on: X360, PC

70. Dante's Inferno - PLAYSTATION 3

Release: Q1 2010
Developer: Visceral Games / EA
Genre: Fantasy Action
Also on: X360

71. Red Dead Redemption - playstation 3

Release: Q1 2010
Developer: Rockstar Games
Genre: Action Shooter
Also on: X360

72. Heavy Rain: The Origami Killer - playstation 3
Release: Q1 2010
Developer: Quantic Dream, SCEA
Genre: Adventure
Exclusive PS3 Release

73. White Knight Chronicles - PlayStation 3
Release: Q1 2010
Developer: Level 5, SCEA
Genre: Action Role-Playing Game
Exclusive PS3 Release

74. Final Fantasy XIV Online - PlayStation 3
Release: TBA
Developre: Square Enix
Genre: Fantasy Online RPG
PC release as well?

75. Aliens: Colonial Marines - PlayStation 3
Release: TBA
Developer: Sega, Gearbox Software
Genre: Sci-Fi First-Person Shooter
Also on: X360, PC

76. Final Fantasy Versus XIII - PlayStation 3

Release: TBA
Developer: Square Enix
Genre: Action Role-Playing Game
Exclusive PS3 Release

77. Gran Turismo 5 - PlayStation 3
Release: TBA
Developer: SCEA / Polyphony
Genre: GT Racing
Exclusive PS3 Release

78. Final Fantasy XIII - PlayStation 3
Release: TBA
Developer: Square Enix
Genre: Role-Playing Game
Also on: X360

The Brand New PS3 Slim!


The brand new PS3 Slim is here!
The system comes with a new power cord (reminiscent of the ones used for the PlayStation 2), an A/V input, a Dual Shock 3 controller and a USB cord. Like the previous PlayStation 3, this PS3 slim does not come with an HDMI cable, which might be an annoyance for gamers/Blu-Ray aficionados who want a plug and play experience. As always, we recommend ordering an HDMI cable through Amazon (which will cost you roughly $10) rather than shelling out $40 or more for a HDMI cable at a big box retailer like Best Buy.

Will my PlayStation 2 games run on the PS3 Slim?
The PS3 Slim is not backwards compatible, meaning you will not be able to play any old PlayStation 2 games on the system, though the PS3 manual says some PSone games will run on the PlayStation 3. A complete list of which games will play on the Slim is pending.

What size hard drive does the PS3 Slim have?
The PS3 Slim comes with a 120 GB harddrive, up from 80 GB in the PlayStation 3. The removable harddrive has moved to the front of the system, to give DIY tinkerers easier access in case they want to install a larger harddrive
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=tqEQI2xmqgg
Link to Ps3 Slim presentation!