For all you gaming addicts looking for a fix, check out these treats:
Opoona - Wii
A very unusual little game for the Wii that combines community and relationship-building elements with a traditional RPG - a bit like, say, Animal Crossing but with a proper adventure to work through. Even better is the way it uses the Wiis Remote and Nunchuck, allowing you to move with the analog stick and battle by swinging the remote.
Crazi Taxi: Fare Wars - PSP
We reckon this is just about old enough now
By
Edge
posted 7 years ago
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When developers are desperate to make you see how realistic their games are they usually show screenshots of fictional things next to the authentic things. Konami has gone one step further by filming footage of real cars drifting around tracks and juxtaposing them, corner for corner, next to its own in-game footage. There's very little to choose between the representations, of course, but the spot-the-difference game gets tiresome pretty quickly.Point made; Enthusia has been built not to try
Variety, they say, is the spice of life. Mashing together mech-based combat, Japanese role-playing elements, Tony Hawk-style futuristic flying skateboard trickology, and vehicule-based brawling - all the while setting everything in a high school full of hormonally-charged teenagers - man, that's a lot of stuff going on. The result of all these genres coming together is what Namco Bandai's got cooking in their first video game title inspired by the Cartoon Network series Eureka Seven.
Eureka
Spunky kids and the giant robots they pilot. It's a description that could be used to describe several different anime series (or games, for that matter). Among them is the excellent Eureka 7 TV series, currently airing on Cartoon Network's Adult Swim and being released on DVD by Bandai Entertainment. With an international megahit anime usually comes a videogame tie-in, and that's precisely what we've got here in Eureka 7 Vol. 2, the second game based on the series for the