Posts with tag Best-of-the-rest-2007
by Christopher Grant Jan 2nd 2008 10:30PM
Filed under: PC
Sam & Max: Season One (PC)
Yeah, it's sort of stretching it since two of Season One's six episodes "aired" in ye olde 2006, but I'm figuring that majority rules (not to mention the first episode of Season Two came out in November) and the retail package was released in '07, so Sam & Max Season One is number one on my list of the best of the rest this year. Actually, these Sam & Max episodes have a lot in common with our #1 choice for Game of the Year: superb writing, genuine humor, bite-sized portions, clever puzzles, and a hefty dollop of charm.
Continue reading Best of the Rest: Chris' Picks of 2007
by Ludwig Kietzmann Jan 2nd 2008 6:30AM
Filed under: Nintendo DS, Features, PC, Sony PlayStation 3, Nintendo Wii, Microsoft Xbox 360
Zack & Wiki: Quest for Barbaros' Treasure (Wii)
Though its puzzles may occasionally infuriate, the real source of frustration regarding
Zack & Wiki stems from the fact that
nobody bought it. Every year has its share of titles that deserve an audience yet never find one, and in this regard,
Zack & Wiki is easily one of the most tragic games to put an uncontrollable smile on your face. Relentlessly charming and beautifully presented, the debut of Capcom's choc-chomping pirate and his simian sidekick challenges the mind and warms that cynical, meh-spouting lump in your chest. How refreshing it was to overcome obstacles and bosses by choosing the power of the mind over an impossibly large bazooka.
Continue reading Best of the Rest: Ludwig's picks of 2007
by Zack Stern Jan 2nd 2008 4:30AM
Filed under: Culture, Nintendo DS, Features, Sony PlayStation 3, Sony PSP, Nintendo Wii, Microsoft Xbox 360, Adventure, Online, Puzzle, RPGs, Rhythm, Mobile, Casual
Phase (iPod)
A must-have game on the iPod? Yep. I'm as surprised as anyone. Apple's music player puttered through
Tetris remakes, solitaire, and other obvious clones until
Phase established some gaming muscle. (And sure,
Musika gets some credit for being unique, but it's more visualizer than game.)
Developed by Harmonix,
Phase is a simple
Guitar Hero-style beat-matching game. Tap a fifth-generation (video) iPod, Classic, or recent Nano's left, center, and right buttons in time with the music and on-screen prompts. Slide a finger around the wheel to catch falling dots. And that's it. The game becomes so much more because of its quirky visuals and ability to sync to your own songs. Nearly any genre works, especially music with a percussive bass line. While the console rhythm games let you buy new track downloads,
Phase's unlimited replay with your own songs makes it a no-brainer for a portable music player.
Continue reading Best of the Rest: Zack's Picks of 2007
by Griffin McElroy Jan 2nd 2008 2:30AM
Filed under: Nintendo DS, Features, Nintendo Wii, Microsoft Xbox 360
Resident Evil 4: Wii Edition (Wii)
For a port of a two-year-old game,
RE4: Wii Edition didn't have a whole lot going for it. It had the same extra features as the PS2 port of the game, not-so-updated graphics, and slightly lower reviews than its original iteration -- and yet, somehow, just by changing how the game is controlled, Capcom created an entirely new adventure. When the peculiar controls for the Wii were first announced, this is the type of interactivity that I imagined from the future games for the system -- responsive, accurate, and realistic. The only way they could have made the gunplay feel any more natural would have been to package the game with an actual gun, which you shot at the on-screen zombies. Once.
Continue reading Best of the Rest: Griffin's Picks of 2007
by Alexander Sliwinski Jan 1st 2008 10:30PM
Filed under: Nintendo DS, Features, PC, Sony PlayStation 3, Sony PSP, Microsoft Xbox 360
Civilization IV: Beyond the Sword (PC)
Please, make the addiction stop!
Civilization IV: Warlords, the first expansion for
Civ IV, made my "
Best of the Rest" last year and
Beyond the Sword tops this year's list. The funny thing is I'm not a
Civ fanboy, nor am I even that great of a player (
Full Disclosure: I still play on Noble level), but
Civ IV is a game I can come back to over and over again.
Beyond the Sword added much-needed mechanics for culture-prone and passive-aggressive players, with enhancements in espionage and other concepts "beyond the sword." Oh, and just to keep last year's tradition going: Firaxis (2K, Take-Two),
please get the rights to Alpha Centauri back from EA and give us a sequel!
Continue reading Best of the Rest: Alexander's Picks of 2007
by Ross Miller Jan 1st 2008 8:30PM
Filed under: Features, PC, Sony PlayStation 3, Nintendo Wii, Microsoft Xbox 360
Team Fortress 2 (Xbox 360, PC, PlayStation 3)
While
Portal is being given its much deserved credit for the year, and
Half-Life 2 has enjoyed years of acclaim, let's not forget about the other pillar of Valve's
The Orange Box. It's been
eight years since the release of
Team Fortress Classic, and the game has undergone so many revisions and delays we half expected it to be released alongside
Duke Nukem Forever sometime
in 2012. As it turned out, the game not only saw the light of day but ended up being an addictive online experience.
As a console gamer enjoying this with a gamepad, I don't care much much for the sniper, soldier, demoman, or anything except medic and occasionally the engineer. There's something brutally satisfying about charging into battle behind a heavy weapons guy, dodging the occasional bullet (people
still haven't learned) and injecting him with a team-killing jolt of invincibility. Hours of enjoyment and not a single bullet shot. Pure. Enjoyment.
Continue reading Best of the Rest: Ross' Picks of 2007
by Jason Dobson Jan 1st 2008 5:30PM
Filed under: Features, PC, Sony PlayStation 2, Sony PSP
Galactic Civilizations II: Dark Avatar (PC)
Stardock proved that it still had its collective finger on the pulse of the PC strategy game community in 2006 with
Galactic Civilizations II: Dread Lords, an amazing game that managed to usurp the 4X strategy crown from
Master of Orion to become the genre's defining title. The studio did it again in early 2007 with the game's expansion,
Dark Avatar, this time adding a much-welcome graphic makeover alongside a healthy collection of other improvements, such a improved AI and deepened customization options.
Dark Avatar is the definitive 4X strategy game for the PC, and the most satisfying strategy game released in 2007.
Continue reading Best of the Rest: Jason's Picks of 2007