1 Jumps
Supercard DSTWO announced
1 Jumps
DS homebrew - Bunjalloo v0.7.7
Posted May 31, 2009 at 08:03PM by Karl B.
Listed in:
Games,
On Shelves This Week
Tags:
Guerrilla,
Nintendo,
Atlantis,
Naruto,
ESRB,
Sucker Punch Productions
Ó
|
|
|||
|
|||
Posted Oct 02, 2008 at 08:31PM by Karl B.
Listed in:
Rumors,
Games
Tags:
Capcom,
EGM,
Infinity Ward,
Guerrilla,
Guerrilla Games,
Quartermann
Ó
|
EGM's resident rumor specialist Quartermann has set his eyes on Capcom,
who has recently enjoyed success via its massive catalog of classic
games. According to Quartermann in the latest issue of EGM, Capcom may
be reaching into that classic gaming bag again. |
|||
|
|||
Posted Jul 19, 2007 at 05:40PM by Glen D.
Listed in:
Opinions & Analysis
Tags:
Capcom,
Super Mario,
Hideo Kojima,
Guerrilla,
The Simpsons,
Hollywood
Ó
|
You may love 'em or hate 'em but let's face it, the contributions of bosses to gaming are almost as important as those of the good guys themselves. In this edition of the QuickList, we're honoring the cream of the crop among the bad guys. The criteria? We scrutinized each based on what he had to offer and what he does best. Whether it's style, toughness or infamy, we took them by what they had to offer and we found 10 left standing. Again, this is all subjective and your opinions are as good as ours. Here they are: 10. The Polar Bear (Ice Climber)- After hours of grueling debates on the subject of whether he's even a boss or not, the Ice Climber Polar Bear has eked his way to a cliff-hanging tenth spot on this list. There's not a lot to say about him in terms of difficulty, but gamers from the past know what time it is when they see the hot, red briefs over the off-white fur. It means you're taking too long to climb and he'll force-advance the level with a jumping fart. Usually, there's no problem getting to his face and pounding his toes with a mallet, but when playing with a friend or sibling, it sparks an unfriendly war of who gets to nail him. The only way to make sure that you do the honors is to sabotage your partner with guerrilla tactics like unorthodox body checks and busting the floors where they stand. We won't be surprised to hear about domestic violence resulting from this scenario. The rest of the bad-ass bosses await after the jump! |
|||
|
|||
Posted Mar 02, 2007 at 03:30AM by Glen D.
Listed in:
News
Tags:
Guerrilla,
San Francisco,
Guerrilla Games
Ó
|
Here's an idea to end all publisher base ideas - a non-profit game publishing company which will devote its revenues for charities and causes that it advocates.Rookie game publishing company OneBigGame intends to do just that by embarking on a mission never before attempted by any developer- existing or otherwise. The game company stated through a press release that the video game industry is among the largest entertainment markets in the world and has a great resource of creative material. It also exercises great influence over popular culture and that's where the company comes in. By capitalizing on the market opportunity, the game can advocate the causes that it believes in and at the same time, generate revenues to aid charities in line with its vision. "Over the past months, we have been conducting informal talks with a wide variety of games industry people, and we are confident the development community is ready for a large scale industry wide charity initiative," says Martin de Ronde, founder of the OneBigGame initiative. Mr. de Ronde is recognized for his role in co-founding game outfit Guerrilla games which released titles Killzone for the PS2 and Shellshock for the Xbox. It is still unclear how details will work out regarding finances and charity, but expect more light to be shed when the company officially goes public in Game Developer's Conference 2007 in San Francisco. |
|||
|
|||
Posted Sep 12, 2006 at 06:35PM by Max F.
Listed in:
Opinions & Analysis
Tags:
Guerrilla,
guerilla marketing
Page 1
Ó
|
For some people, gaming isn't an escape. It's infiltration and warfare. In a recent article from the Escapist, we find out that this is the life of online guerrilla marketers, and you can bet that you've probably already met some of them online. "Jack" is an expert in a unique kind of online fraud. Jack spends weeks trying to infiltrate online communities and gaining the trust of others. Maybe he's spent weeks giving fair, unbiased advice. Then he inserts a recommendation: buy this game. And everybody believes good old unbiased Jack. And nobody suspects that Jack has been hired by the game's publisher or developer to pimp the game. Nobody suspects that they are being controlled. And "Jack" is good at what he does. If the community is mostly young 15-year olds, he blends in. He says that his personalities range from a 10-year-old girl to a 78-year-old man across different ethnicities, stereotypes, and ages. "It's evil," he says. "I'm evil." "I will make you buy this commercial item or visit some site using any means necessary." According to our official QJ Dictionary of Mental Health, escapism is avoiding reality by indulging in an entertaining or imaginative activities. So, whenever you don't do your errands because you are busy playing video games, Dr. Phil and Oprah would call that escapism. So there's a very sick betrayal there: we enjoy video games because they let us escape reality; we become somebody else in another world where we have big guns or swords or muscles and it's perfectly healthy to blow up your enemies and it's easy to tell who the "good guys" and "bad guys" are (yes, we sometimes bring in reality and have huge arguments about consoles or whatever, but for the most part, we just live to play). We are escapists. And in the end, we fall prey to the advice of people who are only pretending to be escapists like us; people who have studied us, pretended to be our friends, know too much about us, and know very well which products are paying them for real. |
|||
|
|||
Contact Us:
|
The QJ.net Network |
|
| Site | Feed |
| QJ.NET | RSS |
| Nintendo DS | RSS |
| PlayStation 3 | RSS |
| PSP Updates | RSS |
| Wii | RSS |
| Xbox 360 | RSS |
| MMORPG | RSS |
| Personal Computer Games | RSS |
| iPhone - iPod Touch | RSS |
| QJ.NET Forums | RSS |
User Favorites - November
| Most Commented | |
| (63) | |
| (56) | |
| (32) | |
| (31) | |
| (22) | |
| (18) | |
| (16) | |
| (15) | |
| (15) | |
| (14) | |
| (13) | |
| (10) | |
| (8) | |
| (8) | |
| (7) | |
| (7) | |
| (6) | |
| (5) | |
| (5) | |
| (4) | |
User Favorites - November
Accessories
(242)Artwork
(44)Cheats
(18)Deals
(91)DS Lite
(210)DSi
(66)Events
(142)Flashcart Related
(51)Games
(3268)Hacks & Exploits
(79)Homebrew Applications
(670)Homebrew Development
(211)Homebrew Emulators
(250)Homebrew Games
(783)How-To
(34)Humor
(40)Imports
(47)Interviews
(371)Mods
(57)News
(4681)Off Topic
(623)On Shelves This Week
(34)Opinions & Analysis
(471)Previews
(766)QJ How-To Series
(1)QuickJump QuickPeek
(34)Reviews
(74)Rumors
(254)Scans
(143)Screenshots
(484)Site News
(54)Software
(35)Videos
(683)Weekend Warrior
(40)Wi-Fi
(168)
Emulators
Amstrad CPC
(11)Apple II
(1)Atari 2600
(6)Chip 8
(3)Colecovision
(4)Commodore 64
(1)Gameboy / Gameboy Color
(9)Mac
(5)MAME
(3)MSX
(8)NeoGeo AES/MVS
(3)NeoGeo Pocket
(2)Nintendo DS (for PC)
(35)Nintendo Entertainment System
(10)ScummVM
(33)Sega Gamegear & Master System
(5)Sega Genesis Megadrive
(10)Sinclair ZX81
(2)Super Nintendo SNES
(33)Tandy Color Computer/ Dragon
(3)Thomson MO5
(1)TI-83+
(1)Ti-85
(2)Vectrex
(1)Watara Supervision
(1)WonderSwan
(5)ZX Spectrum
(12)
Titles
Archives
November 2009
October 2009
September 2009
August 2009
July 2009
June 2009
May 2009
April 2009
March 2009
February 2009
January 2009
December 2008
November 2008
October 2008
September 2008
August 2008
July 2008
June 2008
May 2008
April 2008
March 2008
February 2008
January 2008
December 2007
November 2007
October 2007
September 2007
August 2007
July 2007
June 2007
May 2007
April 2007
March 2007
February 2007
January 2007
December 2006
November 2006
October 2006
September 2006
August 2006
July 2006
June 2006
May 2006
April 2006
March 2006
February 2006
January 2006
December 2005
November 2005
October 2005
September 2005
August 2005
July 2005
June 2005
May 2005





