Erich Becker / November 18, 2001 12:00 AM
I don’t care much for Star Wars, and I don’t need fifty flaming emails to tell me how biased I am against this game because I don’t like a cliché series of movies written by George Lucas on cocktail napkins at “Spanker’s Bar and Grill” in the mid 70s. I don’t have to like the series to be completely objective
Erich Becker / November 18, 2001 12:00 AM
Sometimes you really have to wonder how a game like this gets released in the first place. One, the graphics aren’t all that hot, they could have used some more texture work, which the GameCube can more than handle. Two, they could have make more time to get a decent amount of voiceovers completed, so you don’t feel like you
Erich Becker / November 18, 2001 12:00 AM
As I rush every morning to get a meal and make sure I am neat and clean for my third week on my most recent job, I am reminded why I stay up partying so late with lots of women over, TV and radio louder than loud can be, and garbage covering my once neat carpet. As my carpool arrives
Erich Becker / November 18, 2001 12:00 AM
It is hard not to think about Diablo when playing Throne of Darkness. The similarities between the two games are more than blatantly obvious; some are so obvious, that Click Entertainment merely lifted the feature from Blizzard’s opus. Hell, I wouldn’t be surprised if they even used the same exact source code for the game. In some rights it isn’t
Erich Becker / November 18, 2001 12:00 AM
I wasn’t one of the thousands caught in the crack-like addiction that surrounded the original Tribes. In fact, I never really knew what people saw in the game. Standing up to games like Quake II and Unreal wasn’t an easy thing to do, but Tribes proved that it’s team-based gameplay could win over mindless deathmatching and sweet new technology for
Erich Becker / November 18, 2001 12:00 AM
As more and more fans of MTV become displeased with the way the network is turning, MTV keeps trying to reinvent themselves to make them better in the eye’s of their fans. The more rewarding (in ratings not quality) invention that MTV came up with was Total Request Live (which came from the much better MTV Live). Now Take 2
Erich Becker / May 30, 2001 12:00 AM
“We’re back, and it’s time to make some crazy money!” This is what players are greeted to once they boot up Crazy Taxi 2 for the first time on everyone’s favorite little “console that could,” the Sega Dreamcast. Hitmaker is back and the Crazy Taxi formula is left virtually unchanged with it’s fast speeds, great music, and all around fun