- Kotaku East
In Game Pop-up Scams Chinese Gamer
Pop-up ads are annoying; in-game ads are no better, but when in-game ads are pop-up ads, they can create a lot of mischief. Last week a Chinese gamer in Sichuan province was scammed by a pop-up ad within a popular online racing game. The victim, surnamed Li, works in the garment industry in a small…
By Eric Jou -
UncategorizedWitcher 2 Mod Kit Enters Open Beta, Gets Hot-Blooded Trailer
CD Projekt Red’s RPG The Witcher 2 is getting a mod kit—although, to be fair, it has had one for a while, it’s just going into open beta. Still, it’s a good excuse to listen to some metal and toss a dwarf off a cliff.
By András Neltz -
- Kotaku East
Chinese Man Jailed For Running For-Profit Private Server
Running a private server can be hard and it can cost a lot of money. In China, one man made a lot of money running a private server and now he’s headed to jail. People’s Dailyreports that the Banan district Court of Chongqing, Sichuan province sentenced a young man to three years in prison, four…
By Eric Jou -
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- Culture
The Week in Games: Metrospecial
THQ’s bankruptcy couldn’t kill it. Now, Metro: Last Light finally arrives for the big three—PC, PS3 and 360. Manhunt resurfaces on PSN and Zen Studios’ awesome pinball simulator debuts on Steam. The Week in Games is brought to you by Dealzon Tuesday • Metro: Last Light (360, PS3, PC) • Nancy Drew: Ghost of Thornton…
By Owen Good - Uncategorized
It Seems Easy, But Tiger’s Greatest Feat is Damn Hard in a Video Game
In no rec league could I ever throw a no-hitter. Alone on a basketball court I’d need half an hour to score 69 points—and a trampoline to dunk. But I can do all of those things in my living room. If video games give us the conceit of doing the impossible, only now has one…
By Owen Good - Uncategorized
Tim Schafertells Game Informer that his studio, Double Fine, still is trying to buy back the rights to Stacking and Costume Quest from the dissolved THQ, and also Brütal Legend from EA and Iron Brigade (formerly Trenched) from Microsoft. “We can still make more of those games,” he says.
By Owen Good