You've got Super Mario Bros. and The Legend of Zelda. You've got Metroid, and Castlevania, and Kid Icarus. You've got almost all of the classic, legendary, franchise-establishing NES hits already available on the Virtual Console – and, today, you've got one more. The original Mega Man, Capcom's very first installment in what would go on to become the gaming industry's most prolific series of all time, has finally arrived in Nintendo's Wii Shop. You should have already stopped reading and gone to download it.
The American military is getting new tools to help train its soldiers in the global fight against Osama Bin Laden: video games.
Stars & Stripes is reporting that the Army is planning on investing $50 million over five years on a new game to help train its soldiers -- "Game After Ambush" -- with the first-person shooter game letting players do "most anything a soldier does." Unlike game-slash-PR
Hardcore gamers may have survived for a while with the occasional title thrown their way on the Wii, but the casual-focused conference at E3 this year left many wanting more. Though Nintendo did reveal that new installments of the "core franchises" in Mario and Zelda were in development, it didn't say much else. If the latest remarks from famed designer Shigeru Miyamoto are any indication, though, the old classics will be coming back in "newer and fresher" ways.
Nearly 25 years after the first film, "Ghostbusters" is finally coming to a video game console near you. The cult classic is being developed into an interactive game by Atari, the company officially announced Friday. It will be made available for five systems -- the Nintendo DS, Nintendo Wii, PlayStation 3, PlayStation 2, and Xbox 360 -- and will also be developed into a PC version for Windows. All will become available sometime in 2009.
Canada doesn't seem that bad...but I don't think America is ready for this woman (not to be confused with "a woman")...Facebook group - digg this and join to spread the word!
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