The space-based puzzle platformer is from Facepalm Games, utilizing clay models for the adventures of an explorer who is able to clone himself to help solve the mysteries of his spooky new environment.
Posted 5/16/13 5:10 pm EST by Charles Webb in News, PC, Video
The space-based puzzle platformer is from Facepalm Games, utilizing clay models for the adventures of an explorer who is able to clone himself to help solve the mysteries of his spooky new environment.
Posted 5/16/13 2:55 pm EST by Clint Mize in PC, Previews, PS3, remember me, Xbox 360
June 4th is coming up soon so Capcom and Dontnod are showing off their version of near future with the dystopian, memory hacking game, "Remember Me" hear in New York. Unfortunately, I didn't have enough time to check out the full demo as I was still nostalgie-tripping over "DuckTales" but I did get a few hands on moments with some combat and explored a bit of the seedy underbelly of Neo Paris.
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Posted 5/15/13 6:05 pm EST by Don Hatfield in PC, PS3, Xbox 360
Indie developer Coffee Stain Studios today released "Sanctum 2" for PC and Xbox 360. The follow-up to the team's first tower-defense, first-person shooter hybrid sees players taking on the role of an elite soldier whose been tasked with protecting oxygen-producing cores from hordes of alien attackers. Sounds fun, right?
Posted 5/14/13 5:15 pm EST by MTV Video Games in News, PC
by Joseph Leray
"The Novelist," a new indie stealth-adventure game by Ion Storm and 2K Marin veteran Kent Hudson, has one of the saddest, most melancholy premises I've encountered: you play as a benevolent poltergeist haunting novelist Dan Kaplan and his family.
Supernatural nightmare notwithstanding, the Kaplans' ectoplasmic best friend can read people's thoughts, eavesdrop on their conversations, and thumb through their journals -- all the better to keep the family from coming apart at the seams. Dan's career is stalling apparently, but it's nothing a ghostly presence can't fix. "The Novelist" is kind of like the last episode of American Horror Story: Murder House, but with more humanity and grace and less campy gore and trashy gossip-mongering.