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On April 3rd, 2009 in Uncategorized

Baseball fans can now get real-time updates and exclusive fantasy content on all teams and players in the MLB using their ever reliable iPhone. Zumobi and SportingNews.com today announced the availability of Sporting News Baseball, a free mobile application for iPhone and iPod touch users

With exclusive content from SportingNews.com, this new app gives fans instant access to scores, full standings, stats, MLB league and team news, player details, in-game updates, post-game recaps, and much more. Sporting News Baseball provides player rankings and projections for the upcoming season as well as access to exclusive news and Sporting News blog content.

Sporting News Baseball was previewed this week at CTIA Wireless 2009, and received the distinction of “Best of CTIA Wireless” finalist, given by editors and reviewers at LAPTOP magazine. Part of The Zumobi Network, Sporting News Baseball is free and can be downloaded at the iTunes App Store for iPhone and iPod touch users.

(Source) Press

On March 2nd, 2009 in Uncategorized

Capcom has recently announced the release of a 17.7MB training guide for Street Fighter IV which was originally only available to reviewers.

This guide has it all, full character biographies, move lists for every character in the game, and more previously unseen artwork than you can shake a fist at.

Head here to download the file.

Read (Joystiq)

On February 24th, 2009 in Uncategorized

These days there’s reviews on anything; cars, restaurants, films and of course video games. Newspapers, websites and magazines all have people whose duties are to evaluate the experience of something. In many cases it’s relatively straightforward, mostly with technology: effectiveness of features versus cost, ease of installation/use etc etc. With things like food, films and video games it’s far more difficult to write reviews that’ll keep everyone happy. Ask any group of people their thoughts about a film and you might get as many opinions as there are people present.

Video games are just as dividing. Halo 3 got a review score of 94 on Metacritic but many gamers would rate it far lower. Some of the more addictive games I’ve played received relatively low review scores in comparison to games that didn’t hold my attention for long. The question with reviews is always this: are reviewers writing for anyone but other reviewers?

When asked at DICE Summit 2009 a panel of game developers said that they generally don’t consider the thoughts or opinions of reviewers when creating games. Some point out that the true hallmark of a successful game is its sales, others mentioning the fact that especially for casual games a review is useless, since it likely won’t be read by the person who buys the game. Others point out that reviewers are easily swayed by effective marketing (literally how sumptuous the spread and bar were at an event) and that they’re generally concerned about different things than consumers, reviewers giving more weight to story, voice acting and music. Overall they all stated that for one reason or another the Metacritic scores don’t mean all that much to them.