By News from N4G,
posted 5 years, 5 months ago
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Eidos has had to recall Reservoir Dogs on the Xbox after a printing error was discovered at the last minute.
By News from N4G,
posted 5 years, 6 months ago
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If there's one thing in life that's almost guaranteed, it's that any high-profile videogame that leans towards the more violent persuasion will usually get identified and demonised by certain UK tabloid newspaper. But not this time, as the newspaper appears to have been beaten to it by the UK's Association of Chief Police Officers (ACPO). The group has taken it upon itself to attach some form of notoriety to Eidos and Volatile Games' forthcoming adaptation of Reservoir Dogs on Xbox, PlayStation2, and PC. Speaking to the Yorkshire News, one representative of the ACPO said, Anything that encourages violent emotions, including such emotions towards members of the police service, is particularly disturbing and can only be described as...It is disappointing to find violent video games on the market that may cause psychological harm to those who play them.
Eidos has released a trailer of its forthcoming action game, Reservoir Dogs, giving us a sneaky glimpse of what happened during the infamous heist that was the unseen centerpiece of the entire film.
The action game is based on the 1991 Quentin Tarantino film, but will concentrate on the events that weren't seen in the movie and so will hopefully provide a few answers to such questions as: just how psycho did Mr. Blonde actually get? Where did Mr. Pink hide the loot? And what happened to Mr.
By News from N4G,
posted 5 years, 7 months ago
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Computer game Reservoir Dogs has been effectively banned in Australia after the Office of Film and Literature Classification (OFLC) refused to give the title an MA 15+ rating. Originally due out next month, the game is based on the Quentin Tarantino cult classic, and the OFLC said the decision was made on the basis that the game contained frequent depictions of violence that have a high impact.
Reservoir Dogs the game, based on Quentin Tarantino's classic '90s film, is to be released for Xbox, PS2 and PC this fall, publisher Eidos confirmed today.
The third-person shooter will stay true to the chronology and plot of the diamond-heist-gone-wrong film, while trying to fill in the gaps that the film doesn't cover, such as: what really went on at the heist? What happened to Mr. Blue and Mr. Brown? And perhaps it will clear up once and for all who shot Nice Guy Eddie.
While gameplay