Evening Reading
by Jeff Mattas, Feb 10, 2011 5:00pm PSTInspired by Garnett's recent (if late) discovery of CD Projekt's The Witcher (and The Witcher 2's approaching release), I decided to go back and restart Geralt's first adventure. It had been a while since I'd fired up the game, but it's been at the top of my "favorite games I haven't finished, yet" pile for a couple of years now.
While the game is starting to show its age a bit (especially when compared to more recent, similarly-structured games like Dragon Age), I'm still really impressed as to how well the experience holds up, roughly four years after release. Of course, The Witcher has received significant presentational updates since it first hit the shelves, but that doesn't change the fact that it's still the best looking game that uses the Aurora Engine, even including titles produced by BioWare. If you're an RPG fan that somehow missed it, The Witcher is a game you should go back and play. It's only $19.99 on Steam, at the moment. Well worth it.
In a world where the shelf-life of your average game seems to be diminishing, what are some of your favorite games that still hold up several years after release?
And, here are some newsy links:
Xbox One not backwards compatible with 360 games
Xbox One doesn't require always-on connection
Call of Duty: Ghosts preview: rebooting a franchise
Call of Duty: Ghosts DLC exclusive to Xbox One first
Microsoft joins with Spielberg for live action Halo TV series









So my nephew has finally discovered what the internet is for. porn
My brother asked me if I knew of any child block software or something native in Win7 that might help him curb what he is doing.
So here I am asking you good people to help me out with some suggestions.
Thread Truncated. Click to see all 47 replies.
You must be logged in to post.