8th
FEB

Total Overdose

Posted by admin under Game

Action game fans ought to be able to settle in and blast their ways through Total Overdose’s relatively brief campaign with reasonable levels of enjoyment. Just be prepared for one extremely cheesy ride.

Rarely has a game reveled in its own crapulence the way that Total Overdose: A Gunslinger’s Tale in Mexico does. Taking the concept of a stylish, violent third-person shooter to the height of hyperactive instability, Total Overdose is an all-out celebration of all things gun. Bullets fly with reckless abandon, bodies pile up to an almost alarming degree, and all the while you’re pulling off the kinds of acrobatic maneuvers that would make Keanu Reeves say, “Woah.” Of course, it’s also all been done before. From playing Total Overdose, you get the feeling that the developers at Deadline Games had an awful lot of affection for the Grand Theft Auto and Max Payne games and that they may have watched one too many Robert Rodriguez movies late at night. That’s because the main character plays just like Max Payne, the world around him operates just like the one in Grand Theft Auto, and the storyline plays out like a script Rodriguez might have written early in his career, before he knew what he was doing. Because it’s made up of so many familiar parts, action game fans ought to be able to settle in and blast their ways through Total Overdose’s relatively brief campaign with reasonable levels of enjoyment. Just be prepared for one extremely cheesy ride, and to sift through a few serious flaws as well.

The story of Total Overdose is cut from the kind of heavy-on-the-gunplay, light-on-the-drama cloth made famous in 1980s-era action films. Ramiro Cruz is an ex-convict and all-around screwup. His twin brother works for the DEA. Ramiro’s twin is injured while working undercover, right as he’s about to get in with some rather powerful drug lords down in Mexico. In a twist that plays like a vaquero movie version of the Anthony Hopkins/Chris Rock vehicle Bad Company, Ramiro is brought in to replace his brother so he can get in with the shady dealers. About a billion bullets, bodies, and busts later, you’re dealing with crooked DEA agents, big-time drug deals, and a revenge plot about who really killed Ramiro’s former-DEA-agent father. None of this means a thing, mind you. The plot here is merely a vehicle for you to get out and start shooting things. What little storyline exists here is largely turned irrelevant by the incredibly cheesy voice acting and writing, so there’s no real opportunity to care about any of these people. But that suits the game just fine, since you’ll be too busy killing everybody to bother caring about them.

30th
JAN

3ds max 7 Bible

Posted by admin under Software

Author: Kelly L. Murdock
ISBN: 0-7645-7971-1
Paperback
1294 pages
March 2005

3ds max 7 Bible
* Packed with expert advice, timesaving tips, and more than 150 step-by-step tutorials, this book is a must for anyone who wants to master this complex, expensive software package
* Offers full coverage of new software features and enhancements and shows users how to master everything from the Particle Flow interface and architectural objects and materials to Shockwave 3D Export and VertexPaint features
* The companion CD-ROMs include a demo version of the new 3ds max, tutorial files, 3D models, bonus plug-ins, and more
* 3ds max is used to create approximately eighty percent of the top video games-including Grand Theft Auto 3-and is extensively employed for special effects in movies such as The Matrix Reloaded

Contents:
Part I: Learning the Max Interface.
Part II: Working with Objects.
Part III: Modeling.
Part IV: Materials and Maps.
Part VI: Animation.
Part VIII: Dynamics and reactor.
Part X: MAXScript and Plug-Ins.