Look, I didn’t expect to spend the last two nights obsessively playing Nioh either, but here we are.
Can you survive the horror? … a retro-style survival horror game developed by the two-man indie team of Gonzossm and Iggy Zuk. Survive 30 days and nights in a zombie-infested world by recruiting companions, upgrading weaponry and fortifying your position. Deadly 30 is a retro-style survival horror game developed by the two-man indie team of Gonzossm and Iggy Zuk. Survive 30 days and nights in a zombie-infested world where you can recruit companions, upgrade weaponry, and fortify your position to fight waves of hungry zombies. During the day, you can gather resources, enhance your base's defenses, and explore your surroundings for useful items in order to prepare for fighting relentless waves of zombie attacks. (Hint: Don't get caught outside your base after dark.) Three different playable characters, A.I. controlled Team Combat and upgradeable weaponry and defenses help keep you alive as you attempt to eradicate the zombie hordes and survive 30 deadly nights. Good luck! (You'll need it when all hell breaks loose.)
Look, I didn’t expect to spend the last two nights obsessively playing Nioh either, but here we are.
Can you believe it? Hundreds of ice-cold bodies later, the fifth episode of Hitman is upon us! What better way to…
The air is festive and steam-filled inside the cave of the northeastern coast of the Broken Isles, as the bodies of…
For a game about daredevil stunts and high-flying acrobatics, Mirror’s Edge Catalyst plays it remarkably safe.
Youtube’s Deathmule squeezes just a little under three hours of brutal murder from Mortal Kombat’s 24 year history,…
There’s something uniquely horrid about the prospect of biological warfare. There’s the obvious: diseases like ebola…
In all my years of toy collecting I’ve never managed to fully assemble one of Hasbro’s Marvel Legends Build-A-Figure…
Tom Clancy’s The Division is exciting enough that I don’t mind how dull it can sometimes be. It’s fun enough that I…
It’s rare that gamers ever get to hear the full story behind how (and why) a game was made. So it’s awesome that…
Advertisement