Singularity, Red Faction: Arma (PS3), Rise of Nightmares (360), Blood Drive (360) $10

Bosamba

CAGiversary!
Discounted prices are valid till 12/5/2012.

$9.99 :shipfree:
:ps3: Red Faction: Armageddon
:ps3: Singularity
:360: Singularity
:360: Rise of Nightmares
:360: Blood Drive

(I'm including the article that convinced me to give Singularity a shot for others who haven't tried this game yet.)
Do not let Activision bury Singularity. It's fantastic and you need to play it

"The chances are you’ve already forgotten that Raven Software's Singularity exists. To honest, I’ve only remained aware of it because a notorious press demo last year, which portrayed it as a BioShock rip-off so shameless that myself and a colleague nearly passed out with disbelief.

Since then, every screenshot has seemed to confirm my incredulous reaction, and Activision has done a grand slice of bugger all to promote the game to us. No preview events. No preview code sent to the office. Barely a peep about it at all. It’s not even on the front page of Activision’s website. And it’s out today in Europe and on Tuesday in the US. Naturally, I assumed it was a clunker.

But then earlier this week I got to play it, and found out that it’s fantastic, inventive, refreshing, brutal, and frankly, the most fun I’ve had with an FPS in a long time. You need to know about it. So I'm telling you about it.

Why you don’t know about it
I don’t blame you if you’re not aware of the game. Like I said, it’s had nothing in the way of promotion, and images like the one above make it look like a me-too BioShock clone too cynical for even God himself to imagine. With no direct experience of the game, we were left with that (deeply false) impression right up until this week. But it’s an impression that only relates to the tiniest bit of Singularity’s surface gloss. There’s immensely more going on in this game, and it’s all very, very good.

Why it’s brilliant
There’s a massive irony with Singularity that I have to get out of the way right now. The fact is that while it doesn’t play like BioShock at all, it absolutely is a game made up of borrowed elements. But the ideas it chooses to take, and the skill and imagination with which they’re combined, make it not a shameless retread, but a gleefully fresh cocktail of the FPS genre’s disparate best bits, blended to a brand new, incredibly tasty flavour.

A small dash of BioShock’s visuals and faded ‘50s kitsch. A big splash of Half-Life 2’s fast-flowing, creative combat and savvy environmental puzzling. Squeeze in a wedge of F.E.A.R.’s time-bending spectacle and crush in some breathlessly paced variety and set-pieces, and you have not only an incredibly hackneyed games journalism cliché, but a game that simultaneously pays tribute to and adds to the best moments in first-person shooting to date.

In this age of increasingly dull pseudo-realistic military shooters and overly-orchestrated, plodding, shooting-gallery-style combat, Raven’s game is an exhilarating kick up the arse to the days before Call of Duty became everyone’s standard shooter model. It has a monstrously infectious ‘more is more’ philosophy to gameplay mechanics. It’s the kind of game that lets you kill 20 different enemies 20 different ways in under a minute, via creative combinations of its cleverly complimenting weapons and gadgets.

You can slow down time for individual enemies, leaving everything else (including yourself) running at full speed. You can throw time dilation bubbles into the combat area, turning bad guys into frozen sitting ducks. You can pump them full of bullets, then deactivate the bubble and watch as every shot catches up at the same time. You can use that same bubble as a shield, to slow down incoming fire.

You can rapidly age enemies to death. You can devolve them into zombies and let them do the work for you. You can shockwave them into the air. You can shockwave them into the air, freeze them in time, then devolve them into zombies, and unfreeze them just as one of their friends gets close. Oh, and did I mention that you also have a gravity gun? And a sniper rifle with bullets you can steer manually? And a railgun that works like Gears of War’s Torque Bow? And that every skirmish area is a wide, multi-levelled playground of tactical angles of attack, designed to bring out every ounce of creative violence in your body?

If you’re feverishly thinking ‘Half-Life 2’ here, you’re right. Singularity is the first non-Valve FPS in years that has come close to evoking that particular brand of clever, inventive, fast-flowing brutality known as ‘Going Gordon Freeman on someone’s ass’. And it has a remarkably good, time-zone-hopping storyline as well, which manages to be high-concept and engaging, while remaining pacey and fun. Even if it does shamelessly borrow a couple of H-L2’s character archetypes along the way.

But the shamelessness of Singularity’s influences really doesn’t matter, however obvious they are to a genre-savvy FPS player. In fact they’re part of the fun. It’s one big mega-mix love-in that brings together the previously separated elements of so many games you love and makes them work cohesively together for the first time. So well in fact, that it almost makes them feel completely new. Don’t let mystifying lack of fanfare put you off. It’s an absolute stormer and you need to give it your time."
 
Last edited by a moderator:
Sad to see people passing on Rise of Nightmares. It’s one of my favorite Kinect games, and I totally didn’t mind playing through it three times to get all of the achievements. I read some review where they said the motion navigation was clunky and they were running into walls. I did not experience this issue whatsoever and felt the “controls” were great; stepping forward to move and twisting your shoulders to turn became very natural to me early on. Using weapons has a certain kind of thrill to it as well, and for the most part this controls well too if you understand Kinect’s limitations/strengths.

The graphics and environments are bland, and the story probably leaves more to be desired, but I’d absolutely recommend this for $10. I paid $40+tax and have no regrets.
 
[quote name='litepink']Sad to see people passing on Rise of Nightmares. It’s one of my favorite Kinect games, and I totally didn’t mind playing through it three times to get all of the achievements. I read some review where they said the motion navigation was clunky and they were running into walls. I did not experience this issue whatsoever and felt the “controls” were great; stepping forward to move and twisting your shoulders to turn became very natural to me early on. Using weapons has a certain kind of thrill to it as well, and for the most part this controls well too if you understand Kinect’s limitations/strengths.

The graphics and environments are bland, and the story probably leaves more to be desired, but I’d absolutely recommend this for $10. I paid $40+tax and have no regrets.[/QUOTE]

Agreed. Based on the demo I've been watching prices for it for months, and almost bit a few times at $15-20. I had a little trouble with the one foot out thing, it seems there must be a better way, but all in all, the demo was good enough to make me add it to various wishlists. Looking forward to playing through. I loved the simple things, weapon specific movements, reaching out to open a door.
 
[quote name='roedaniel19']BTW, anyone played RF Armageddon? I loved Guerilla, but I've heard it's nothing like it. Have it but haven't played it yet.[/QUOTE]

Quite true, its nothing like Guerrilla, its linear based 3rd person gameplay. Lots of action, but its is a drastic change from Guerrilla. IMHO, its an awesome game but the change just turned off too many ppl from trying it.
 
[quote name='Mooplaid']Blood Drive is the only one on the list I thought I might try. That bad, huh? Be aware I already have tried Singularity and it's pretty good. I've yet to finish it, however. Someday! :D But a large backlog of games to go still.

On another note, I love your signature! Such a great movie, and it made me laugh. :p[/QUOTE]

It's repetitive as hell. There are a couple modes and they repeate over and over on "new" maps that are all really similar.

It's like Carmageddon meets Twisted Metal, but not as good as either one alone.
 
[quote name='EnronLackey']Quite true, its nothing like Guerrilla, its linear based 3rd person gameplay. Lots of action, but its is a drastic change from Guerrilla. IMHO, its an awesome game but the change just turned off too many ppl from trying it.[/QUOTE]

Thanks, looking forward to trying. Someday that is :lol:
 
[quote name='Blaster man']Valkyria Chronicles is $15.99. That's the usual price right? I've been waiting on this to be $10 for years now.[/QUOTE]

I wouldn't count on it going any lower. It's probably actually going to get harder to find. I bought it a few months ago at that price and haven't touched it yet, but I didn't wanna risk potentially having to pay more for it later down the line.
 
[quote name='roedaniel19']I wouldn't count on it going any lower. It's probably actually going to get harder to find. I bought it a few months ago at that price and haven't touched it yet, but I didn't wanna risk potentially having to pay more for it later down the line.[/QUOTE]

I don't feel any obligation to play it. Newegg has had it in stock for years though. Seems like they have to clearance it at some point.
 
[quote name='Vinny']In for Singularity. I keep hearing pockets of good things about it.[/QUOTE]

Front or back pockets? I heard good things too, but maybe only as big as the watch pocket. ;)
 
[quote name='nixmahn']Probably because Rebecca is cute, although somewhat jailbait-ish?[/QUOTE]

Both of them are friggin' weird-looking, hence the creeper for a baby.
 
Will Amazon or Best Buy price match this? I remember BB having the same price on Singularity a couple months back.

Is anyone else getting close to being broke after all the BF and bundle deals?
 
[quote name='litepink']Sad to see people passing on Rise of Nightmares. It’s one of my favorite Kinect games, and I totally didn’t mind playing through it three times to get all of the achievements. I read some review where they said the motion navigation was clunky and they were running into walls. I did not experience this issue whatsoever and felt the “controls” were great; stepping forward to move and twisting your shoulders to turn became very natural to me early on. Using weapons has a certain kind of thrill to it as well, and for the most part this controls well too if you understand Kinect’s limitations/strengths.

The graphics and environments are bland, and the story probably leaves more to be desired, but I’d absolutely recommend this for $10. I paid $40+tax and have no regrets.[/QUOTE]

The reason I didn't comment on it is I don't have a Kinect. ;) Were I to think I might eventually get one, I might pick it up. However, I doubt I'll have my own Kinect before the new 360 system launches.

It's good that you enjoyed the game and have no regrets on your early purchase. It's not every game that one can say that about.
 
[quote name='Be3fJerky']Anyone know if Singularity has been cheaper? Swear to god Gamefly has had it for like $7-$9 with FS?[/QUOTE]

Best Buy had it on sale for $5 new last year during Black Friday.
 
[quote name='jfoul']Picked up Singularity.

Well, that's 15 games bought so far this month...[/QUOTE]
Nice. I'm at 13 lol
 
How much of that $10 will the developer get back on this one? I'm hoping for a sequel and want to show support, but not sure how this will help it. Tempted to buy a 2nd one for a X-mas gift if it will really make a dent in the process.

On a side note, buy some more copies of Valkyria Chronicles so Sega will give us #3 already!! Amazing game and the reason I bought a PS3 in the 1st place.
 
bread's done
Back
Top