Thursday, November 21, 2013

Assassin's Creed IV: Black Flag

I
t is 1715. Pirates rule the Caribbean and have established a lawless pirate republic. Among these outlaws is a fearsome young captain named Edward Kenway. His exploits earn the respect of pirate legends like Blackbeard, but draw him into an ancient war that may destroy everything the pirates have built.
Set sail on the high seas in Assassin's Creed IV: Black Flag, a pirate-filled adventure in the Assassin's Creed saga. Become Edward Kenway, a charismatic yet brutal pirate captain, trained by Assassins. Command your ship, the Jackdaw, and strike fear in all who see her. Plunder and pillage to upgrade the Jackdaw with ammunition and equipment needed to fight off enemy ships as you venture out to discover the most diverse Assassin's Creed world ever created.
  days 11 hours ago

"We all work in the darkness to serve the light"
Released Platforms
October 29th, 2013 (NA)
November 1st, 2013 (EU)
November 19th, 2013 (Next Gen)
PlayStation 3, Xbox 360, PC and Wii U
PlayStation 4, Xbox One
Developer Publisher
Ubisoft Montreal Ubisoft
 Official Sites
assassinscreed.ubi.com / On Facebook // On Twitter
Assassin's Creed 4 or Assassin's Creed IV: Black Flag, the successor to Assassin's Creed 3, was released on Xbox 360, PlayStation 3 and Wii U on October 29th 2013. It will be released for PlayStation 4 and Xbox One on their respective launch days (PS4: November 29, 2013, Xbox One: November 22, 2013) and PC as well. Assassin's Creed 4 takes place in 1715 in the Caribbean, featuring new locations. Assassin's Creed 4 stars a new protagonist, pirate and Assassin named Edward Kenway, grandfather of Connor and father of Haytham Kenway of Assassin's Creed 3. Ubisoft Montreal has traditionally developed Assassin's Creed games, but a new team developed Assassin's Creed 4. 
Assassin's Creed IV: Black Flag is set in the Caribbean on multiple islands including playable areas in Kingston, Havana and Nassau. The Caribbean ocean is an explorable region via Kenway's ship Jackdaw. Smaller islands and locations can be visited, and underwater locations can be explored for the first time in the Assassin's Creed series.
The modern-day setting no longer focuses on Desmond but on Abstergo Industries/Entertainment and the research analysts who work to explore Kenway's memories. [n]





Wednesday, November 6, 2013

Battlefield 4




It’s an exaggeration to say that the PC version of Battlefield 4 is an entirely different kettle of fish from the Xbox or PS3 versions. The single-player campaign is virtually unchanged beyond the cosmetics, and the feel of the multiplayer action is broadly similar. Yet three things will strike you almost immediately. Firstly, Battlefield 4 goes from being a good-looking console game to an awesome-looking PC title. Secondly, the performance issues – providing you have some half-decent hardware – are a thing of the past. You’re experiencing Battlefield 4 as it was designed to be experienced. Finally, the sheer numbers and enthusiasm of the players make online multiplayer, and specifically Conquest, so much more enjoyable.

Maps like Flood Zone, Siege of Shanghai and Lancang Dam, which seemed vast and oddly empty on the current gen consoles, come alive on PC. You seem to spend more time with squadmates (there’s more chance that one will be alive next time you respawn) and there are more skirmishes going on around the various control points. Of course, it’s not so easy to score cheap points by capturing unattended control points, but then this is Battlefield, not Cower Near A Flag or Camp Out With a Sniper Rifle. Tanks, helicopters and other armoured death machines seem to be everywhere, and the result is a game with a lot more boom, bang and bluster.

It hits you that, on the Xbox 360, Battlefield 4 multiplayer rarely had the big, cinematic, epic feel you get from racing to a checkpoint on a quadbike while tank shells shatter the trees around you, or that you get from a last ditch defence against a squad of enemy troops where victory or defeat come down to the last few health points. On the PC, Battlefield 4 is full of this stuff. It puts the Battlefield back in Battlefield.

On the flipside, some of the smaller maps might actually feel too intense. Operation Locker, with its control points strung out in installations along an ice-capped mountain ridge, can become a ridiculous running scrap over the interior control points, while the outside areas feel like a sniper’s shooting gallery. It’s still brilliant, just because the action never lets up, but it’s questionable how much room for strategy there is on a packed PC server. And even on the PC version a handful of the maps are turning into sniperfests – we’re looking at you Zavod 311 and Golmud Railway.

Curiously, interest in ‘levolution’ – the large-scale destructive events that change the maps – already seems to be drying up. We’ve had several games where, say, the Shanghai skyscraper remains untouched while everyone focuses on the enemy, or where players actually get told not to destroy the levy in flood-zone because others prefer the map dry. It’s going to be interesting to see whether levolution ends up becoming a key part of the gameplay, or ends up as a gimmicky footnote in the Battlefield 4 story.

 
Graphics are the other major reason to opt for the PC version, or wait for the next-gen consoles to hit. Played at 1080p with High or Ultra detail levels switched on, Battlefield 4 can look stunning. God beams, lighting effects, particle effects and textures are all so much more sophisticated and impressive on the PC version, and the simple jump in resolution makes it easier to spot an enemy trooper against a debris-cluttered background. The real world setting and a preponderance of grey architecture means that it’s not exactly the most beautiful game you’ve ever seen – and still no match for the more imaginative Crysis 3 – but it’s incredibly convincing. And when the campaign’s big action set-pieces hit, like the helicopter attack on the factory in chapter one or the planes sliding around the broken carrier in chapter three, the smoother frame rates and added detail make them all the more cinematic

TORRENT LINK 


 



It’s an exaggeration to say that the PC version of Battlefield 4 is an entirely different kettle of fish from the Xbox or PS3 versions. The single-player campaign is virtually unchanged beyond the cosmetics, and the feel of the multiplayer action is broadly similar. Yet three things will strike you almost immediately. Firstly, Battlefield 4 goes from being a good-looking console game to an awesome-looking PC title. Secondly, the performance issues – providing you have some half-decent hardware – are a thing of the past. You’re experiencing Battlefield 4 as it was designed to be experienced. Finally, the sheer numbers and enthusiasm of the players make online multiplayer, and specifically Conquest, so much more enjoyable.
Read more at http://www.trustedreviews.com/battlefield-4_Games_review#ZrIQIESY6UaH5idy.99asdasdasdasd
It’s an exaggeration to say that the PC version of Battlefield 4 is an entirely different kettle of fish from the Xbox or PS3 versions. The single-player campaign is virtually unchanged beyond the cosmetics, and the feel of the multiplayer action is broadly similar. Yet three things will strike you almost immediately. Firstly, Battlefield 4 goes from being a good-looking console game to an awesome-looking PC title. Secondly, the performance issues – providing you have some half-decent hardware – are a thing of the past. You’re experiencing Battlefield 4 as it was designed to be experienced. Finally, the sheer numbers and enthusiasm of the players make online multiplayer, and specifically Conquest, so much more enjoyable.

Read more at http://www.trustedreviews.com/battlefield-4_Games_review#ZrIQIESY6UaH5idy.99
It’s an exaggeration to say that the PC version of Battlefield 4 is an entirely different kettle of fish from the Xbox or PS3 versions. The single-player campaign is virtually unchanged beyond the cosmetics, and the feel of the multiplayer action is broadly similar. Yet three things will strike you almost immediately. Firstly, Battlefield 4 goes from being a good-looking console game to an awesome-looking PC title. Secondly, the performance issues – providing you have some half-decent hardware – are a thing of the past. You’re experiencing Battlefield 4 as it was designed to be experienced. Finally, the sheer numbers and enthusiasm of the players make online multiplayer, and specifically Conquest, so much more enjoyable.

Read more at http://www.trustedreviews.com/battlefield-4_Games_review#ZrIQIESY6UaH5idy.99
It’s an exaggeration to say that the PC version of Battlefield 4 is an entirely different kettle of fish from the Xbox or PS3 versions. The single-player campaign is virtually unchanged beyond the cosmetics, and the feel of the multiplayer action is broadly similar. Yet three things will strike you almost immediately. Firstly, Battlefield 4 goes from being a good-looking console game to an awesome-looking PC title. Secondly, the performance issues – providing you have some half-decent hardware – are a thing of the past. You’re experiencing Battlefield 4 as it was designed to be experienced. Finally, the sheer numbers and enthusiasm of the players make online multiplayer, and specifically Conquest, so much more enjoyable.

Read more at http://www.trustedreviews.com/battlefield-4_Games_review#ZrIQIESY6UaH5idy.99