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Saturday, March 19, 2011

Download Dragon Age 2 Demo


BioWare wants to shake things up with Dragon Age II. They want to evolve the game’s art style and visual fidelity, making it look worlds better than Origins. They also want combat to feel more fluid, aggressive, and faster paced. But as with most BioWare titles, the quality of the story is the main focus – and the development team is exploring new directions for how to tell the tale of Dragon Age II’s new protagonist, Hawke.Although, you won’t be creating your own custom Grey Warden as you did in Origins, Dragon Age II still lets you customize everything else so that your Hawke is as unique as you want him or her to be. The opening warrior, rogue, and mage classes return along with the ability to tweak your gender and appearance as you see fit.

Demo Downloads:

PC: Click Here

Xbox 360: Download available at XBOX LIVE

PlayStation: Download available at PlayStation Network

Download Split Second Demo

Unlike many modern day driving games, Split/Second is as subtle as a lightning bolt tearing through a fireworks factory. That’s not to say that careful maneuvering, perfect powerslides, and skillful overtakes aren’t all integral parts of Black Rock Studios latest arcade racer, but it is hard to concentrate on any of these tactics when a six-story building is crumbling onto the track in front of you and an ocean liner is careening wildly into your path.Like the Burnout series before it, Split/Second is an arcade racer that feeds on adrenaline, as each explosively-crafted stunt course is layered with enough destructive dangers to keep any player with a pulse firmly perched at the edge of their seat. The racing is fast and feverish, with enemy cars constantly nipping at your tailpipe as the ever-evolving tracks present their own unique challenges. Drifting, drafting behind other vehicles, and catching air will allow you to drop a piece of the environment onto an opponent. Explosive barrels, toppling towers, collapsing missile silos, and even a bursting dam are just a few of the dozens of obstacles that can be triggered at will, though players must time these attacks right if they don’t want to crush themselves alongside their opponents.

The car handling is solid, as hairpin turns and near-miss passes feel smooth and manageable, while the aggressive AI keeps every race frustratingly close. Pitch-perfect driving and clever use of the environmental hazards will only get you so far, as enemy racers will always seem to catch up to you moments before the finish line is crossed. This constant jockeying for first ensures that there’s never a dull moment in the twelve-tier campaign mode, though it also leads to mounds of frustration and some aggravating photo-finish losses. Thankfully, you don’t need to place first in every race to advance through the game, though achievement hunters are in for an uphill struggle with this one.Split/Second includes a handful of exciting race modes, all of which take advantage of the game’s glorified use of destruction. Aside from standard racing and elimination contests, a unique ‘survival’ mode has players dodging gasoline-filled barrels that drop out of the back of a rampaging truck. Another mode has players evading missiles that are landing on the road in front of them, stringing up point combos as each attack wave is passed without incident. Most of these modes can also be played online with up to eight players, offering a welcome change from the standard race types found in most of the competition. While all of the included modes are a blast, I do wish there were a few more unique options. New race types stop being introduced half-way through the campaign, making the back half a bit less exciting than the initial rush.

Demo Downloads:

PC: Click Here

Xbox 360: Download available at XBOX LIVE

PlayStation: Download available at PlayStaion Network

Download Call of Duty: Modern Warfare Demo


The first time I really got into Call of Duty was when I started playing on a server with a few friends around May of last year. I was on a laptop running Windows playing Call of Duty 4: Modern Warfare at the time, but now I am finally reliving the memories on the Xbox 360 version of the game. Comparing to the latest game in the series, Modern Warfare 2, there are a bunch of changes, some little and some big. First off are the maps in Modern Warfare. I absolutely love the maps in Modern Warfare because they are not so big and not so small. The menu in Call of Duty 4, in my opinion, is a little uglier and more cluttered than the one on Modern Warfare 2. One of the thing I do miss from Call of Duty 4 that isn’t in Modern Warfare 2 is some of the guns I used take longer to get. That isn’t a bad thing, per say, but it was nice to have my favorite guns at an earlier level. The multiplayer was definitely more stable and not as full of hacks as Modern Warfare 2 has at this point in time. All in all, this game is a really good game and definitely something to play around

Demo Downloads:

PC: Click Here

Xbox 360: Download available at XBOX LIVE

PlayStation: Download availablr at PLayStation Network

Download Just Cause 2 Demo

If the first Just Cause felt like a two-week break in the Caribbean short on interesting things to do, then Just Cause 2 can feel, at times, like your average package holiday: a series of activities and excursions ranging from thoroughly entertaining to so monotonous that you’re relieved to make it back to the hotel bar. Rico remains a fantastically versatile protagonist. His grappling hook returns, and continues to exert its irresistible pull (literally so, for those guards unfortunate enough to be posted on lookout towers). No longer a separate weapon, however, the grapple can be activated with a button tap at any time, attaches to almost anything, and can be used in conjunction with Rico’s inexhaustible supply of parachutes to fling him around the map from a standing start. It’s exhilarating, and the defining feature of Just Cause 2, coming into its own when used to hijack a helicopter in mid-air.

Other changes include the introduction of the ‘chaos’ system, which quantifies the destruction you unleash upon the property of the fictional east Asian island of Panau and its dictatorial regime. Accumulate enough chaos and you unlock new weapons and vehicles for purchase on the game’s black market, new side missions, and further developments along the game’s main storyline. It should be an effective way of making sure the ad-hoc carnage at which the game excels genuinely contributes to your overall progress, but it’s let down by the fact that the bars representing the chaos you’ve caused fail to move along at any meaningful rate. There’s something disappointing about finding your spontaneous and thoroughly destructive assault on a military complex has had little to no effect on the infrastructure of Panau, and there are times when trying to unlock the next storyline mission can feel more like grinding for experience points in an MMORPG than racing to the next chapter of a breathless action thriller. Eventually you’ll realise the only meaningful way to progress in the game is to take part in one of the many side missions offered by the various criminal factions based on the island.

Demo Downloads:

PC: Click Here

Xbox 360: Download available at XBOX LIVE

PlayStation: Download available at PlayStation Network

Download Pro Evolution Soccer 2011 Demo


Pro Evolution Soccer 2011 reinvigorates the series with the most advanced set of improved gameplay additions, control options and to catch up with the evolution of the real-life soccer. Central to its total freedom of play, the game introduces a power bar for each player that allows the user to determine the exact strength and placement of every pass and shot. Balls can now be spread absolutely anywhere with surgical precision, with long balls into space, short passes to feet, and intricate one-twos allowing the player to dictate play and control the tempo of a match.

This freedom of play is also extended via AI routines designed to place every move and decision into the player's hands. No longer will assisted AI intervene during matches; users will now need to sense and react to threats intuitively as opposed to chasing the ball; and passes will not automatically reach the nearest player. Instead, routines facilitate complete control both of the player and their chosen actions in every respect to give the player sublime control over every movement.

Demo Download:

PC: Click Here

Xbox 360: Download available at XBOX LIVE

PlayStation: Download available at PlayStation Network

Crysis 2 Multiple Player Demo Download


Crysis 2 is an upcoming first-person shooter video game developed by Crytek and published by Electronic Arts, due for release on Microsoft Windows, PlayStation 3, and Xbox 360 in March 2011. It is the sequel to the 2007 video game Crysis and its parallel expansion game, Crysis Warhead. The story was written by authors Richard Morgan and Peter Watts, who has also written a novel adaptation of the game. It will be the first game to showcase the CryEngine 3 game engine.

The Limited Edition of Crysis 2 will be available at the same price as the regular game, but in limited quantities. It comes with bonus experience points to “immediately boost the player up to Rank 5, giving access to all the preset class loadouts,” a digital camo weapon skin for the SCAR, “Hologram Decoy” attachment for the SCAR, and unique in-game platinum dog tags. The Indian Version,on pre-order,also includes Threat Detector Suit Module (Early Access) and on buying from EA store,a gold dog tag and desert camo for SCAR.

Demo Downloads:

PC: Click Here

Xbox 360: Download available at XBOX LIVE

PlayStation: Download available at PlayStation Network


Friday, March 18, 2011

Nail'd Demo Download


Nail'd is an arcade-style off-road racer with a focus on speed and chaos over realistic physics. Straight away, Nail'd seems a little dated. From the name to its style, it screams "X-Games circa 2003," when dudes were screaming about sick air while "DOING THE DEW BRO." But in reality, Nail'd actually goes further back from a design perspective, calling on memories of games like Off-road Thunder and other arcade rally racers in the late '80s and '90s. Those games eschewed complication in favor of immediate, in-your-face gratification because they had to; they were competing for your quarters 90 seconds at a time. However, it's 2010. Arcades are dead, consoles are king, depth is expected, and Nail'd just can't keep up with the pack.

The setup is simple enough. The meat of the game is in its career mode, where you can race an ATV or MX bike through several leagues and courses in a quest to win the Nail'd championship. Most races require you to finish three laps around a course, though occasionally, Nail'd mixes things up, whether it's by adding "mutators" to races (which add quirks such as infinite boost or no collision with other drivers), or through stunt challenges, where you're judged on your completion time and the "tricks" you pull off. I put tricks in quotes because there isn't much in the way of finesse here. Something as simple as landing successfully from a jump can be a trick, as is passing through flaming gates or running other racers off the track. There's also multiplayer racing for up to 12 players online. This game is simply fantastic.

Demo DOWNLOADS:

PC: Click Here

Xbox 360: Download is available at XBOX LIVE

PlayStation: Download is available at PlayStation Network

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