Video Game Review: Transformers: Dark of the Moon

There is one significant change, and that is the inclusion of “Stealth Force” mode. It serves as an alternate vehicular configuration, allowing for more firepower and maneuverability. Things handle well there, but its inclusion screws up the traditional vehicle form. To drive as a standard car/truck you’ll need to hold down the left trigger, which makes the right trigger the brake. It sounds like a small thing, but since pretty much every driving game you’ve played in living memory had the right trigger be the gas it really feels weird. As a result, I found that I crashed into objects a lot.

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Video Game Review: Child of Eden

Of course, you can also play with the Kinect. Here, both hands manipulate the reticule — when your right hand is raised it’s the lock-on laser, and when it’s the left you’re firing your tracer gun. The tracer gun works beautifully and is smoother and faster than a controller. The lock-on laser aims fine, but it doesn’t always recognize the pushing motion that fires the weapon. To launch “euphoria” you’ll throw your hands in the air (waiving them like you just don’t care is optional), which is the low point of the Kinect functionality as it causes the camera to go skyward. That can be disorienting.

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Video Game Review: Trenched

Beyond your weapons, you can also deploy a series of entrenchments to help you in battle. Depending on your loadout you’ll have access to as many as four different turrets, each mapped to a separate direction on the d-pad. Once you’ve selected the one you want the left bumper brings up a crosshair to choose where you’d like it dropped. The right bumper turns on a magnet to gather scrap.

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Video Game Review: Dungeon Siege III

The game’s characters are all easily distinguishable from one another, and while not every item you equip changes your appearance, there are different families of items so by no means does every weapon or shield look the same. Magical effects course through empowered items, and one-of-a-kind items carry unique looks for some impressive results. Things tend to get hectic in combat, but the game’s frame rate never dipped even as spell effects and sword clashes filled the screen.

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Video Game Review: Duke Nukem Forever

More damning than the slow-loading textures, though, is the general lack of variation and detail work in the environments. Having Las Vegas, a location packed with gaudy over-the-top visuals, be one of the game’s primary settings really serves to hammer home just how uninspired the areas are. Plus, even with a modest level of detail the frame rate still takes a pounding at times. It’s not limited to when the action gets frantic, either, as there are some moments that tend to get bogged down no matter what.

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Video Game Review: Virtua Tennis 4

The game’s developers did go a little overboard with the sweat engine. In some cases, it could just be the second point of the game and the players appear drenched with sweat to the point where they almost look like melting wax statues. Also, hair appears to be last-gen, particularly on female players, as ponytails sometimes stick out in weird geometric shapes and angles.

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