The story begins travelling to the Island of Oahu, Hawaii. The Island is dedicated to the sole purpose of racing fast cars. Following-on from the Xbox360 release of the same name; the player can drive anywhere on the Island finding Events on the way. These events consist of racing against a single car, racing against a number of cars, doing the fastest speed past speed cameras and doing time trials. There are also invites to Car Clubs where, if you beat all of the members, you become president of the club and receive a bonus; either a new car or a free upgrade for a car.
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In recent years THQ has become almost synonymous with making games for children. Despite a dedication to more mature software like Destroy All Humans!, Warhammer 40,000: Dawn Of War, Saints Row and Supreme Commander, THQ’s numerous Nickelodeon franchises appear to be where the majority of THQ’s time goes, most likely due to their consistently good sales. Although THQ are amongst the largest publishers of the oft ridiculed “kids game” their affinity with the genre hasn’t exactly translated into skill. For every Disney/Pixar: Cars or Barnyard there is a The Incredibles: Rise Of The Underminer or Spongebob Squarepants: Lights, Camera, Pants! Making the purchase of a new children’s THQ game a very hit-and-miss affair. THQ’s latest release, Avatar: The Legend Of Aang, looks to have promise. With gameplay similar to Activision’s X-Men: Legends and a great deal of licensed material, Avatar: The Legend Of Aang could very easily be a half-decent game, which is usually enough to spur parents to invest in it. However, given experience with THQ’s past licensed titles, it could all go very wrong.
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Is there anybody that hasn’t played Lemmings at some point? Herding the little blue critters through Stages of ever increasing difficultly has been done on countless platforms over the years, from it’s beginnings on the Amiga all the way to its downloadable status on the PlayStation3’s PlayStation Store and countless freeware clones. For those not in the know, Lemmings was created by DMA Design, the company that went on to become Rockstar North, creator of yet another incredibly popular series, Grand Theft Auto, back in 1991.
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Frontier Developments, the makers of Rollercoaster Tycoon 3, bring us their new Theme Park Simulator Thrillville. Thrillville is a PlayStation2 console-exclusive at the moment, with ATARI planning a PSP release just around the corner.
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Parappa the Rapper is the gaming equivalent of marmite. However, whether you love it or hate it, its release way back in 1996 popularised a genre that, despite never truly becoming widespread, has inspired many imitations and spawned one of the most popular attractions of many arcades; the Rhythm game. The genre has evolved from its humble beginnings on the PlayStation Controller to the Dance Mat-based craze that swept through Arcades in recent years. Although jumping up-and-down has fitness and comedy benefits, it is still the domain of hyperactive teenage girls and drunk people. Unfortunately the former do not spend any real amount on videogames and the latter, well they probably can’t remember why they did it anyway. Naturally, when a genre shows promise like this, somebody will want to capitalise on the popularity and make a version for the videogame buying public and we all know what that means; bring out the gangstaz, the bling and the Hip-Hop and urbanize it. Enter SONY Computer Entertainment Incorporated, renowned masters of taking a genre and making it “hip”. The game? B-Boy.
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2K Sports brings us their new Ice Hockey game, the newest addition to there NHL 2K series NHL 2K7. The 2K Sports series started on the SEGA DreamCast, released on February 9th, 2000, as part of an exclusive line-up of sports titles and to become a main competitor to the Electronic Arts Sports titles. After releasing the first of the NHL 2K series the 2K Sports team didn’t release NHL 2K1 instead they took to making NHL 2K2. By spending more time on just one game they created a well presented title, trying to get one over on the EA Sports team. NHL 2K2 was the last of the 2K Sports titles to be played on the DreamCast, but as the console Market changed so did the 2K Sports team, wanting what most of us do, to make it big time and make loads of money, and so the company expanded, and released more games, such as the NBA 2K series. Hitting the market with better, or at least, the same quality of game as any Electronic Arts Sports title, 2K Sports added variety to the industry in an area which had previously been under a strict monopoly.
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THQ’s WWE SmackDown! games have been considered the definitive console wrestling titles for some time now. Despite EA’s stranglehold on the official rights for most sports titles, all SmackDown! related games since the PlayStation era have been published by THQ. Unfortunately, given the frequency of new SmackDown! games, this years WWE SmackDown! Vs. Raw 2007 being the eight edition in the annual series, there is the risk of the series’ production becoming stale. Yuke’s promise a whole new Analogue Grapple System and numerous new additions to gameplay for WWE SmackDown! Vs. Raw 2007, however, with their age-old Engine starting to look a little dated, is this enough?
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Having started life on the PlayStation back in 1998, Spyro The Dragon had the task of rescuing all the elder dragons from the rather upset Gnarsty Gnorc who had all of the elder dragons imprisoned for the comments they made during an interview with the dragons, however he missed one… Spyro!
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