2011年1月27日星期四

It's not the first game to include prison fights - Mafia II had them - but this one looks like it requires more strategy and timing

It's not the first game to include prison fights - Mafia II had them - but this one looks like it requires more strategy and timing, plus a headbutt or two.Fight Night Champion arrives March 1.”To: Ash From: Crecente Re: Tell Me About Your 2010Looks like you had a great 2010. I did far too much to include it in a mere day note! :pWhat you missedI've Got Sand In My Arcade EyesFive New Year's Resolutions For GamersThe Year In replica Patek Philippe 5196R Men's Watch Sports Video GamesReport: Ubisoft Antipiracy Measure No Longer Requires Always-On Net Connection”Beginning with this summer's release of RUSE, Ubisoft curbed the use of its atrociously executed antipiracy safeguards, which required a constant Internet connection for the game to function.

Apparently, an online connection is now only required at startup. replica Patek Philippe 5196J Men's Watch Gamer reports that the constant DRM checks on games like Assassin's Creed 2 and Splinter Cell: Conviction have ceased. They'll only be required at startup - not throughout the game. If an online connection is lost mid-game, it will still continue.Earlier this year, hackers wrought havoc against Ubisoft shortly after its hated policy came to light, shutting down Ubi DRM servers and freezing PC gamers out of titles they'd bought, whether they were playing them online or not. Ubisoft responded with free game downloads for those shut out of the games.

Constant Net Connection No Longer Required For Ubisoft Games [PC Gamer]”Ubisoft's digital rights management system for its PC games has been wildly unpopular since first adopted. And that's putting it mildly. Which might explain why the replica Patek Philippe 5134G Men's Watch company's next PC game is ditching it.RUSE, a real-time strategy game, will not be using Ubisoft's maligned system, instead opting for the far more publicly acceptable Steamworks method, employed by games on Valve's Steam service.It's still a form of digital rights management, sure, but it's also one that doesn't require you to be connected to the internet at all times like Ubisoft's did, which was most people's primary bone of contention.

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