New Toys R Us Flyer Shows a Wii Price Drop On Sept.27

Posted by PAYBACK-IRONMAN | Nintendo, Real Talk with the HipHopGamer | Monday 14 September 2009 11:41 pm

Since the PS3 and Xbox 360 have already dropped there prices it seemed like it was only a matter of time before Nintendo did the same. Images of a yet to be released Toys R Us flyer, that wasn’t supposed to be released until Sunday September 27 has already surfaced on the internet and it shows that the Nintendo Wii’s price will be dropped to $199.99.

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Now Nintendo hasn’t commented yet but the source comes straight from Kotaku.com and usually when these flyers appear on their website they turn out to be the real deal. So stay tuned in the coming weeks for the official statement from Nintendo.

First Details On The New Batman Arkham Asylum DLC

Posted by PAYBACK-IRONMAN | Microsoft, PC, Real Talk with the HipHopGamer, Sony | Monday 14 September 2009 11:18 pm

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Batman Arkham Asylum is easily one of the best games of 2009 and Rocksteady is really showing that they love their fans by releasing new DLC for the title and best of all it’ll be free. The DLC pack is titled “Insane Night” and here’s the official word:

On September 17th (on PS3, PC and 360), you’ll be able to download the “Totally Insane” combat challenge, which pits the Dark Knight against escaped lunatics in Arkham’s records facility, as well as the “Nocturnal Hunter” predator challenge, where you and Bats will rely on the shadows of the Arkham watchtowers to remain hidden.

Look for the DLC to drop this Thursday and it will be available for free on PC, PS3 and Xbox 360.

Zune HD Launch Materials

Posted by hiphopgamer | Microsoft, Real Talk with the HipHopGamer | Monday 14 September 2009 8:24 pm

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Screen: 480 x 272 OLED Multi-touch Screen

GPU: NVIDIA Tegra chipset with 8 independent processors

Data Capacity: 16GB/32GB

Available Finishes:Black, Titanium

HD Support: 720p video playback and output via HDMI

Wireless: 802.11b/g Wi-Fi

Browser:Internet Explorer Mobile 6

Battery Life: 33 hours of audio playback, 8.5 hours of video.

Other features:Built-in Accelerometer for tilt functions, Built-in HD radio tuner, mobile access to the Zune Marketplace via Wi-Fi.

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Zune HD AV Dock – $89.99
Connect your Zune HD to an HDTV via HDMI or to a home stereo system via Optical Digital cable. Includes wall charger, wireless remote, sync cable, and AV cable.
Zune HD Premium Car Pack — $79.99
Charge your Zune HD while on the go, as well as broadcast audio playback to your car stereo via FM. Other features include additional USB port for multiple player charging, and auxiliary audio output.

Zune HD Charge Pack — $29.99
Standard wall charger for the Zune HD.

Zune HD Power Pack — $49.99
Includes Zune HDMI cable, AV output cable, standard wall charger.

Zune HD Sync Dock — $49.99
Standalone Zune HD dock with wireless remote and power cord.

Zune HD Sync Cable — $19.99
Standard USB sync cable for Zune HD.

‘Dirty Dancing’ star Patrick Swayze dies at 57

Posted by hiphopgamer | Features, Real Talk with the HipHopGamer | Monday 14 September 2009 8:11 pm

LOS ANGELES – Patrick Swayze, the hunky actor who danced his way into viewers’ hearts with “Dirty Dancing” and then broke them with “Ghost,” died Monday after a battle with pancreatic cancer. He was 57.

“Patrick Swayze passed away peacefully today with family at his side after facing the challenges of his illness for the last 20 months,” said a statement released Monday evening by his publicist, Annett Wolf. No other details were given.

Fans of the actor were saddened to learn in March 2008 that Swayze was suffering from a particularly deadly form of cancer.

He had kept working despite the diagnosis, putting together a memoir with his wife and shooting “The Beast,” an A&E drama series for which he had already made the pilot. It drew a respectable 1.3 million viewers when the 13 episodes ran in 2009, but A&E said it had reluctantly decided not to renew it for a second season.

Swayze said he opted not to use painkilling drugs while making “The Beast” because they would have taken the edge off his performance. He acknowledged that time might be running out given the grim nature of the disease.

When he first went public with the illness, some reports gave him only weeks to live, but his doctor said his situation was “considerably more optimistic” than that.

“I’d say five years is pretty wishful thinking,” Swayze told ABC’s Barbara Walters in early 2009. “Two years seems likely if you’re going to believe statistics. I want to last until they find a cure, which means I’d better get a fire under it.”

A three-time Golden Globe nominee, Swayze became a star with his performance as the misunderstood bad-boy Johnny Castle in “Dirty Dancing.” As the son of a choreographer who began his career in musical theater, he seemed a natural to play the role.

A coming-of-age romance starring Jennifer Grey as an idealistic young woman on vacation with her family and Swayze as the Catskills resort’s sexy (and much older) dance instructor, the film made great use of both his grace on his feet and his muscular physique.

It became an international phenomenon in the summer of 1987, spawning albums, an Oscar-winning hit song in “(I’ve Had) the Time of My Life,” stage productions and a sequel, 2004’s “Dirty Dancing: Havana Nights,” in which he made a cameo.

Swayze performed and co-wrote a song on the soundtrack, the ballad “She’s Like the Wind,” inspired by his wife, Lisa Niemi. The film also gave him the chance to utter the now-classic line, “Nobody puts Baby in a corner.”

And it allowed him to poke fun at himself on a “Saturday Night Live” episode, in which he played a wannabe Chippendales dancer alongside the corpulent — and frighteningly shirtless — Chris Farley.

A major crowdpleaser, the film drew only mixed reviews from critics, though Vincent Canby wrote in The New York Times, “Given the limitations of his role, that of a poor but handsome sex-object abused by the rich women at Kellerman’s Mountain House, Mr. Swayze is also good. … He’s at his best — as is the movie — when he’s dancing.”

Swayze followed that up with the 1989 action flick “Road House,” in which he played a bouncer at a rowdy bar. But it was his performance in 1990’s “Ghost” that showed his vulnerable, sensitive side. He starred as a murdered man trying to communicate with his fiancee (Demi Moore) — with great frustration and longing — through a psychic played by Whoopi Goldberg.

Swayze said at the time that he fought for the role of Sam Wheat (director Jerry Zucker wanted Kevin Kline) but once he went in for an audition and read six scenes, he got it.

Why did he want the part so badly? “It made me cry four or five times,” he said of Bruce Joel Rubin’s Oscar-winning script in an AP interview.

“Ghost” provided yet another indelible musical moment: Swayze and Moore sensually molding pottery together to the strains of the Righteous Brothers’ “Unchained Melody.” It also earned a best-picture nomination and a supporting-actress Oscar for Goldberg, who said she wouldn’t have won if it weren’t for Swayze.

“When I won my Academy Award, the only person I really thanked was Patrick,” Goldberg said in March 2008 on the ABC daytime talk show “The View.”

Swayze himself earned three Golden Globe nominations, for “Dirty Dancing,” “Ghost” and 1995’s “To Wong Foo, Thanks for Everything! Julie Newmar,” which further allowed him to toy with his masculine image. The role called for him to play a drag queen on a cross-country road trip alongside Wesley Snipes and John Leguizamo.

His heartthrob status almost kept him from being considered for the role of Vida Boheme.

“I couldn’t get seen on it because everyone viewed me as terminally heterosexually masculine-macho,” he told the AP then. But he transformed himself so completely that when his screen test was sent to Steven Spielberg, whose Amblin pictures produced “To Wong Foo,” Spielberg didn’t recognize him.

Among his earlier films, Swayze was part of the star-studded lineup of up-and-comers in Francis Ford Coppola’s 1983 adaptation of S.E. Hinton’s novel “The Outsiders,” alongside Rob Lowe, Tom Cruise, Matt Dillon, Ralph Macchio, Emilio Estevez and Diane Lane. Swayze played Darrel “Dary” Curtis, the oldest of three wayward brothers — and essentially the father figure — in a poor family in small-town Oklahoma.

Other ’80s films included “Red Dawn,” “Grandview U.S.A.” (for which he also provided choreography) and “Youngblood,” once more with Lowe, as Canadian hockey teammates.

In the ’90s, he made such eclectic films as “Point Break” (1991), in which he played the leader of a band of bank-robbing surfers, and the family Western “Tall Tale” (1995), in which he starred as Pecos Bill. He appeared on the cover of People magazine as its “Sexiest Man Alive” in 1991, but his career tapered off toward the end of the 1990s, when he also had stay in rehab for alcohol abuse. In 2001, he appeared in the cult favorite “Donnie Darko,” and in 2003 he returned to the New York stage with “Chicago”; 2006 found him in the musical “Guys and Dolls” in London.

Swayze was born in 1952 in Houston, the son of Jesse Swayze and choreographer Patsy Swayze, whose films include “Urban Cowboy.”

He played football but also was drawn to dance and theater, performing with the Feld, Joffrey and Harkness Ballets and appearing on Broadway as Danny Zuko in “Grease.” But he turned to acting in 1978 after a series of injuries.

Within a couple years of moving to Los Angeles, he made his debut in the roller-disco movie “Skatetown, U.S.A.” The eclectic cast included Scott Baio, Flip Wilson, Maureen McCormack and Billy Barty.

Swayze had a couple of movies in the works when his diagnosis was announced, including the drama “Powder Blue,” starring Jessica Biel, Forest Whitaker and his younger brother, Don, which was scheduled for release this year.

Off-screen, he was an avid conservationist who was moved by his time in Africa to shine a light on “man’s greed and absolute unwillingness to operate according to Mother Nature’s laws,” he told the AP in 2004.

Swayze was married since 1975 to Niemi, a fellow dancer who took lessons with his mother; they met when he was 19 and she was 15. A licensed pilot, Niemi would fly her husband from Los Angeles to Northern California for treatment at Stanford University Medical Center, People magazine reported in a cover story

SOURCE

Create your own videogame

Posted by wheelsfire | Community News, Microsoft, Real Talk with the HipHopGamer | Monday 14 September 2009 4:22 pm

Microsoft has launched a kid-friendly game building tool on Games Marketplace. It is currently available in North America and Europe at least. It is a very friendly tool that teaches you the fundamentals of programming by breaking it down into simple options. The free trial version shows the basics and gives you to free reign to create a world. Not sure if it will come out in Australia or anywhere else but there are 5 things for people who can get it to try.

1. Recreate a gaming classic.
2. Start a war. You can dabble in godhood using the object option to spawn to separate groups on opposites of a random map. Color code them using different shades, then program them to shoot at the opposing color.
3. Fiddle with the settings
4. Run before you walk. (Just play around)
5. Try every game – It already has pre-existing genres loaded in to show its versatility, with puzzlers, platformers, and even a mini-RPG. Try your hand at each one and you\’ll learn more.

Spore Hero Hits The Wii Exclusively

Posted by hiphopgamer | Nintendo, Real Talk with the HipHopGamer | Monday 14 September 2009 1:28 pm

Spore Hero Spore Hero is an action-adventure game created exclusively for the Wii. Set in a rich and vibrant 3D world, Spore Hero empowers the player to become a hero as they embark on an epic quest to save their creature’s home planet from destruction. Along this journey, players will engage in challenging battles and solve puzzles to collect and unlock more than 250 new creature parts, all with unique abilities.

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These parts, which can be used to customise creatures in the revolutionary Spore Creature Creator, can change the way creatures will play and fight in the world. Players can also utilise their brawling skills in a dynamic multiplayer mode, where they battle their friends with their own customised creature to become the baddest?? Spore hero around!

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DAFT PUNK TO MAKE THEIR VIDEO GAME DEBUT IN DJ HERO

Posted by hiphopgamer | Microsoft, Real Talk with the HipHopGamer, Sony | Monday 14 September 2009 1:11 pm

DAFT PUNK TO MAKE THEIR VIDEO GAME DEBUT IN DJ HERO

Legendary Electronic Music Duo To Lend Unique Likenesses and Massive Variety of Music Exclusively to the Game.

For the first time ever in a video game, GRAMMYR Award winning DJ’s and producing duo, Daft Punk, will start the party right with Activision Publishing, Inc.

Featuring 93 exclusive on-disc mixes from some of the biggest acts in hip-hop, pop, rock and dance, players will be able to test their DJing chops as virtual recreations of the renowned twosome and experience their iconic sounds in eleven original mixes, including two signature “Megamixes,” using their music.

Daft Punk “Around the World” vs. Young MC “Bust A Move”
* Daft Punk “Da Funk” vs. NASA “Strange Enough ft. Karen O, ODB and
Fatlip”
* Daft Punk “Da Funk” vs. Queen “Another One Bites the Dust”
* Daft Punk “Robot Rock” vs. Hashim “Al-Naafiysh (The Soul)” -
Produced and mixed by The Scratch Perverts
* Daft Punk “Robot Rock” vs. Queen “We Will Rock You”
* Daft Punk “Short Circuit” vs. Boogie Down Productions “Jack Of
Spades”
* Daft Punk “Technologic” vs. Gary Numan “Cars”
* Daft Punk “Television Rules The Nation” vs. No Doubt “Hella Good”

“Partnering with Daft Punk is a rare opportunity in any medium and we are extremely honored to have worked with them so closely on integrating into DJ Hero in such a compelling way,” said Tim Riley, Vice President of Music Affairs for Guitar Hero. “This is the first time in a video game that fans will have this kind of direct interaction with Daft Punk while also experiencing never-before-released mixes that feature some of their most popular tracks. It’s amazing working with Daft Punk as they are the quintessential electronic music act known around the world for their unique style and music.”

Expanding upon the revolutionary easy to pick up/challenging to master
gameplay mechanics developed and refined in Guitar Hero, DJ Hero delivers an all-new interactive music experience that allows players to start the party and not only experience, but to hear music in an all-new way.

With over 100
individual songs, highlighted in 93 unique never-before-released mixes that blend genres of music, including hip-hop, pop, rock and dance, DJ Hero delivers the most diverse and international collection of music ever
assembled in a music game by incorporating anthems from legendary artists.

Created exclusively for DJ Hero, the turntable controller immerses fans into the DJ culture and a sea of music as they utilize and master various DJ techniques including scratching, crossfading and sampling, while leaving room for creative expression with a variety of effects and player chosen samples and scratches, transforming a face in the crowd into the life of the party.