You have to appreciate Relic’s guts. In the original Dawn of War, it had a beautiful game, which generated three successful expansion packs, played nice in multiplayer, provided epic battles and was quickly enshrined in the Hall of Fame of RTS games. It had it all: base building, teching up, a lot of unit types, a lot of factions, an overall strategic map in the final releases, wargear for commanders, and scripted missions for the toughest challenges.
Read more here:
Dawn of War II
No need for “an original game,” no need to keep a CD close or search the Internet for a downloadable version! To play this game, all you need is a PC running Windows XP or Vista, a browser (Firefox or Internet Explorer) and a good Internet connection. Quake Live is a first person shooter that allows you to frag your way through multiple game types of online action. The details In August 2007, id Software announced the development of a web-based online first person shooter: Quake Zero.
Read this article:
Quake Live – Freeware Online Game and Portal
For quite some time, racing games have become synonymous with Electronic Arts’ yearly Need For Speed titles, which have generated massive amounts of profit for the company despite a somewhat descending curve in terms of quality. But EA hasn’t been resting on its laurels and has supported the Criterion Games studio to create a new iteration in its Burnout series. As such, Burnout Paradise was created and launched for the Xbox 360 and PlayStation 3 almost a year ago.
See original here:
Burnout Paradise: The Ultimate Box
Sandbox adventure games have been, for quite some time, synonymous with Rockstar’s very popular Grand Theft Auto franchise. Since GTA III, a first 3D installment in the series, people have always weighed other titles against it, with the most common result being that these titles couldn’t compare to it. With the next-gen iteration in series, GTA IV, Rockstar placed the bar even higher, as the game won critical acclaim from a lot of reviewers.
Continued here:
Saints Row 2