Tuesday, August 16, 2016

Free DLC coming to Forza 6 players

Forza Motorsport 6 is the 6th Forza Motorsport and 8th overall installment in the Forza series, and was released. It's a racing video game developed by Turn 10 Studios and published worldwide on September 15, 2015 by Microsoft Studios for the Xbox One. And on March this year, Microsoft officially announced Forza Motorsport 6: Apex, a free-to-play version for Windows 10.

Forza Motorsport 6 features new gameplay elements, such rain and night racing. Also featured, is a new story mode called "Stories of Motorsport", which offers approximately 70 hours of gameplay. Forza Motorsport 6 features more than 450 cars, more than twice the number of cars in Forza Motorsport 5 game.


The Forza Racing Championship is coming to Forza 6 during the next few months, and it will be bringing free DLC with it. The Championship will be a series of online events inclusive to all skill levels, and according to the announcement, you'll be competing for "glory and real-world prizes," and "everyone has a chance to win."

Other recent Forza Motorsport 6 DLC includes a NASCAR expansion pack, and some Fallout 4 cross-promotion.

The free-to-play Forza Motorsport 6: Apex is due for release on PC with so many remarkable new games coming out in 2016, after an open beta last month. Going forward, all Forza games will be on both PC and Xbox One.

For more games reviews and news, you can check out this review journal now to update latest information in the game industry.

Tuesday, August 9, 2016

Rayman Adventures quick reviews

Instead of introducing you video game reviews as usual, today, we'll spend some minutes on Rayman Adventures, a quite famous game on mobile. Once you start the game, you won't stop it.

Despite the fact that it's not among new free games these days, Rayman Adventures has still attracted a lot of new users to download and play the game.


In fact, the infinite runner sub-genre has featured a long line of console gaming mascots. Sonic The Hedgehog is just one of the many animated gaming critters who’s hopped onto mobile devices. Ubisoft transported its lovable, no-limb having hero Rayman into a smaller game that looked just as good as their home console entries.

Rayman Adventures was incredibly easy on the eyes thanks to the fine art design done with the UbiArt Framework video game engine. This game stood apart from other infinite runners by allowing players to switch directions, which gave everyone the option to find every treasure they may have run past. The series’ signature humor is on full display and the Incrediball creatures are too damn lovable. Rayman Adventures is the most visually pleasing and entertaining mobile infinite runner of the year.

Really hope that those quick reviews on the game are helpful to you.

Monday, August 1, 2016

Games reviews roundup: Death Road to Canada; Human Fall Flat

New life, so to speak, for the zombie genre in a fun indie adventure, and a fine puzzling platformer from Curve Digital
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Death Road to Canada

PC, Mac, Linux, Rocketcat Games/Madgarden, cert: N/A

So popular has zombie fiction become that the variety of themes in the genre has become surprisingly expansive, but it is a bounty of lore that has been ruthlessly plundered by game designers. The indie team behind Death Road to Canada, however, appear to have found an relatively untapped seam in the archetypes of the undead on which to hang a captivating new game.

As the title suggests, this energetic blend of action-RPG, survival adventure and interactive fiction focuses on the moment in the zombie apocalypse when the protagonists must undertake a daring road trip to sanctuary.

Here the gameplay focuses on plundering small towns for resources while fending off the hordes and making decisions in the text adventure tradition. Each play-through presents a randomly generated road trip, and when the lead survivor and any tag-alongs succumb to the undead, it’s back to the start for a different adventure. Charismatic and balanced throughout, with a charming retro aesthetic, this is a trip well worth taking. WF


Human Fall Flat

PC, Curve Digital/No Brakes Games, cert: 3

This is not a grandiose affair. Indeed, it’s really not much to look at, with simple floating environments and a blobby, nondescript main character. A good thing, then, that Human Fall Flat is, for the most part, a gem to play. A physics-based environmental puzzler, the aim is to guide almost amorphous charge Bob through various worlds, always looking for the next exit, and its precipitous drop to the next level. To get there, there are fiendish challenges to conquer using only Bob’s sticky fingers to move objects or clamber over obstacles, creative use of perspective, and some basic platforming.

Despite the simplicity of the controls, the game offers plenty of freedom in how to solve puzzles. Past the first few there’s rarely only one solution to a conundrum, making replays rewarding. However, it is let down by the lack of urgency to Bob’s quest: no reason is given beyond some faux philosophy at the start. With no incentive and some increasingly tricky puzzles, sheer frustration may drive some away. MK
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