Rock Band: Band in a Box (Xbox360) Review

Posted by: admin  :  Category: Xbox

Rock Band: Band in a BoxRock Band: Band in a Box

1: Introduction

Rock Band: Band in a Box was developed by Massachusetts-based developer called Harmonix. Its a new revolutionary types of game for you to experience music, either as an singer, guitarist or drummer. This game has more than 50 tunes to play with, such as the Rolling Stones, The Ramones or Oasis and it is really pack with lots of fun. Rock Band features some of the world’s biggest rock artists and spans every genre of rock ranging from alternative and classic rock to heavy metal and punk.

2: Inside the Packages

 Rock Band Mike

1: Microphone

 Rock band Guitar

2: Guitar

 Rock Band drum

3: Drums

 Rock Band Solus

4: Note: Games are not included (Require Rock Band Solus), Click here : Rock Band: Solus

5: USB Hub to hook up with Xbox360

3: Gameplay

This game bears resemblance to Guitar Hero 1 and 2, but is is slightly different due to new elements embedded, such as playing the drum and singing. It is a new platform for gamers to interact with music. The gameplay challenges user to gather a band and tour for fame and fortune mastering lead/bass guitar, drums and vocals. The gameplay learning curve is very simple, user only have to press a coloured button that matches the coloured light that appears on the screen. This means that if a yellow colours appears on the screen while you are playing, quickly press the yellow button at the right time. The more you get it right, the higher your score will be. Depending on the difficulty setting, you doesn’t have to hit every single note, but the song is broken into phrases, and it seems that the software grades each phrase by how well the singer matches it.

Each instruments have 4 difficulties level, you can beat the higher difficulties level after you level up your skill. If you are a newbie, having only to use 3 out of 5 buttons will certainly ease your gameplay.

The drums are for those who really want to rocks out. The drums is made using high quality material with a sturdy feel, so it should be able to withstand constant beating, especially in this type of game. The base of the drum is wide and solid, with the metal poles that hold the drum pads up are adjustable so players of different heights should be able to get comfortable. There is also a full controller built into the drums so that you can navigate the menus using either the drum pads or the d-pad and buttons. The pads themselves are much larger than I was was expected.

Rock Band: Band in a Box contains a Fender Stratocaster guitar , has more features, and feels great to play with even if you’re used to the Guitar Hero controllers. If you have Guitar Hero 3 Guitar, you can also use it in this game. While some people may have trouble adjusting, the ability to play with Guitar Hero guitars gives people the option to ditch the extra buttons and the special effects to go back to something they’re more used to.

4: Conclusion

Overall, this is a hugely entertaining game that is rather special given that there isn’t anything else quite like it as a single game.  You’ll have hours of fun, especially if you’re the sort who has regular gaming sessions at your home.  Just be aware that space is a consideration, the whole kit is not exactly small.

The final real consideration in the purchase of Rock Band: Band In A Box is that it doesn’t come with the game.  You are required to buy the game Rock Band: Solus in order to complete the full package .  The cost will be bit expensive.  However, I certainly recommend this if you like music and gaming. Rock Band: Band in a Box is highly recommended set of game.

Click here to get your copy now: Rock Band : Band in a Box

Wii Fit Reviews

Posted by: admin  :  Category: Nintendo

Wii Fit

 Wii fit
Wii fit is the current bestseller for game deals. The Wii Fit takes the transfrom games from exercise with the inclusion of a balance board peripheral that can tell you on the fly exactly how well you’re doing with its various activities. Nintendo is heavily marketing this innovative title as a mixture of fitness and fun, and for the most part it works. It’s a decent alternative for those bored with the repetitiveness of going to a gym or too self-conscious to join a yoga or aerobics class.

Wii Fit BMI

You’ll start by creating your own profile. Choose a Mii, enter your age and height information, and do a few quick tests:
BMI Check: BMI, or Body Mass Index, is a measure of body fat based on height and weight that is the standard used by agencies such as the World Health Organization . To check your BMI, you’ll enter your height then stand on the Wii Balance Board and let it read your weight.
Wii Fit Age: After you’ve checked your BMI, you’ll do a basic balance test and find out your current Wii Fit Age. This basic balance test measures how well you can control your left and right balance. Based on the results, you’ll be assigned a Wii Fit Age.

To order your own Wii Fit now click here: www.game-deals.net/WiiFit
Categories:
Wii Fit features four main categories to choose from: Strength Training, Aerobics, Yoga and Balance Games. As you progress , you’ll earn Fit Credits that unlock additional exercises and activities within these categories. Wii Fit also tracks the activities you do the most and puts them into the Favorites category.
 

1: Strength Training: Put your strength to the test with muscle-toning exercises like Single Leg Extension, Sideways Leg Lift, Arm and Leg Lift, Single-Arm Stand, Torso Twists, Rowing Squat, Single Leg Twist, Lunge, Push-Up and Side Plank, Jackknife, Plank and Tricep Extension. Challenges include Push-Up Challenge, Plank Challenge and Jackknife Challenge.
 

2: Aerobics: Get your heart pumping with fun, interactive Aerobic exercises like Hula Hoop®, BasicStep, Basic Run, Super Hula Hoop, Advanced Step, 2-P Run, Rhythm Boxing, Free Step and Free Run.

3: Yoga: Work on your balance and flexibility with Yoga poses and activities like Deep Breathing, Half-Moon, Dance, Cobra, Bridge, Spinal Twist, Shoulder Stand, Warrior, Tree, Sun Salutation, Standing Knee, Palm Tree, Chair, Triangle and Downward-Facing Dog.

4: Balance Games: Get into the action with fun, balanced-based games like Soccer Heading, Ski Slalom, Ski Jump, Table Tilt, Tightrope Walk, Balance Bubble, Penguin Slide, Snowboard Slalom and Lotus Focus.

 Wii Fit2

Tracking Results:
Keep tabs on your daily progress with easy-to-understand charts and graphs. Using your personal profile, you can set goals, view a graph of your BMI results over time, check your Wii Fit Age, see how many Fit Credits you’ve earned, and even enter exercise time you’ve done outside of Wii Fit. It’s all about coming back and exercising a little every day, and the personal profile makes tracking your daily progress simple and easy.
You can quickly check your Wii Fit Age and BMI without even putting the game in the console by going directly to the Wii Fit Channel.
Eight family members can create their own profiles in Wii Fit. On the profile-selection screen, everyone in the family can see each other’s recent BMI progress and Fit Credit total. This encourage frienly competition and most important keep fit.

To order one today, Click on the link below

www.game-deals.net/WiiFit

Grand Theft Auto 4 Review

Posted by: admin  :  Category: General

Grand Theft auto 4

Grand Theft Auto 4 for PS3 and Xbox become bestsellers for Game Deals for many week. Enclosed is the review for the most popular games currently.

What does the American Dream mean today? For Niko Belic, fresh off the boat from Europe. It’s the hope he can escape his past. For his cousin, Roman, it is the vision that together they can find fortune in Liberty City, gateway to the land of opportunity. As they slip into debt and are dragged into a criminal underworld by a series of shysters, thieves and sociopaths, they discover that the reality is very different from the dream in a city that worships money and status, and is heaven for those who have them an a living nightmare for those who don’t.

GTA4-2

One of the many things that set GTAIV apart from its predecessors is Liberty City, which is more convincing as a living, breathing urban environment than anything that you’ve seen in a game before, and bears little resemblance to its namesake in 2001’s GTAIII. Liberty’s diverse population believably attempts to go about its daily business, seemingly unaware that several criminal factions are at war in the city. Niko has no such luck. He’s compelled to start working for one of the factions shortly after arriving, when he learns that his cousin Roman has some potentially fatal gambling debts. Niko’s military experience makes him a useful freelancer for employers in the business of killing each other, and though his reluctance to carry out their orders is often apparent, he does whatever is asked of him in the hope that completing missions for other people will ultimately give him the means to complete his own.

Actually, Niko doesn’t have to do everything that is asked of him. On several occasions as you play through his story, you’ll be presented with decisions that afford you the option of doing what you think is right rather than blindly following instructions. You don’t necessarily have to kill a target if he or she promises to disappear, but you have to weigh the risk of your employer finding out against the possibility that the person whose life you spare might prove useful later in the game, or even have work for you in the form of bonus missions. To say anything more specific on this subject would be to risk spoiling one of GTAIV’s most interesting new features, but suffice it to say that every decision you make has consequences, and you’ll likely want to play through the game at least twice to see how the alternatives unfold.

gta4-3

Grand Theft Auto IV’s story mode can be beaten in less than 30 hours, and there are so many optional activities and side missions to take part in along the way that you can comfortably double that number if you’re in no hurry. The majority of the story missions task you with making deliveries and/or killing people, and play out in much the same way as those in previous games. With that said, most of the missions are a lot easier this time around, partly because Niko is a more agile and efficient killer than any of his predecessors, and partly because the LCPD seemingly has better things to do than hunt down an illegal immigrant who’s gunning down undesirables all over the city. Some of the more imaginative missions sprinkled throughout the story include a kidnapping, a bank heist, and a job interview. The cinematic cutscenes associated with story missions are superbly presented and are the sequences in which the game’s characters really shine. Without exception, the characters you encounter benefit from great animation, great voice work, and superbly expressive faces. They’re not always so impressive when they join you on a mission and refuse to do what they’re supposed to (for example, not following you on an escort mission, or failing to negotiate a doorway). Nevertheless, these problems are few and far between, and they’re made less painful by the new “replay mission” option that you’re presented with whenever you fail.

New abilities in Niko’s arsenal include scaling fences and walls anywhere he can get a foothold, shimmying along ledges, and, most importantly, taking cover behind objects. The ability to stick close to walls, parked cars, and the like at the touch of a button makes GTAIV’s gunplay a huge improvement over that in previous games, and, in tandem with the new targeting system, it also makes it a lot easier. Enemies are rarely smart enough to get to you while you’re in cover, and given that you can lock your targeting reticle on to them even when they’re hidden, all you have to do is wait for them to poke their heads out and then pick them off with a minimum of effort. Locking on to enemies targets their torso by default, but you can use the right analog stick to fine-tune your aim and kill them more quickly with a headshot or two. Playing without using the lock-on feature make things more difficult, but you’ll need to master the technique so that you can shoot blindly at enemies from positions of cover when you dare not poke your own head out to line up the shot.

Given the amount of trouble that you get into as you play through the story mode, it’s inevitable that the police are going to get involved from time to time, even when their presence isn’t a scripted feature of your mission. Liberty City’s boys in blue are quick to respond when you get flagged with a wanted level of between one and six stars, but they’re not nearly as tough to deal with as their counterparts in previous GTA games. They don’t drive as quickly when pursuing you, they rarely bother to set up roadblocks, and you’ll need to blow up practically an entire city block before the FIB (that’s not a typo) show up. Furthermore, you’re given an unfair advantage in the form of your GPS system; when you’re not using it to plot a valid route to any waypoint of your choosing, it doubles as a kind of police scanner. Any time you have a brush with the law, the GPS shows you the exact locations of patrol cars and cops on foot in your area, and highlights the circular area (centered on your last known whereabouts) where they’re concentrating their search. To escape, all you need to do is move outside the circle and then avoid being seen for 10 seconds or so, which is often best achieved by finding a safe spot and just sitting there. It’s not a bad system in theory, but in practice it makes dodging the law a little too easy, especially when your wanted level is low and the search area is small.

When you’re not running missions for criminals, taking part in street races, stealing cars to order, or randomly causing trouble, you’ll find that there are plenty of opportunities to unwind in Liberty City. Some of these optional activities offer tangible rewards that can prove useful in missions later on, whereas others are just a fun way to kill time and take in more of GTAIV’s superb humor. For example, you can watch television, listen to numerous different radio stations, check out some genuinely funny shows (including some big-name acts) at cabaret and comedy clubs, and use a computer to surf the in-game Internet.

GTAIV’s Internet is filled with spoofs of all the kinds of Web sites that you’d only ever look at accidentally or when you know there’s no danger of getting caught. Some of them can be found only by clicking on links in spam e-mails, whereas others are advertised prominently on the search page. There’s plenty of amusing stuff to find if you spend some time in one of the “TW@” Internet cafes, but the most interesting site by far is an online dating agency through which you can meet women who, if they like your profile, will agree to go on dates with you. Dating and socializing with friends is something you can spend as much or as little of your time doing as you like, and though the people you meet can occasionally be demanding to the point that they become irritating, keeping them happy invariably benefits you in some way.

Get it now here: http://www.game-deals.net/GTA4

Keeping friends and dates happy means spending time with them and doing things that they enjoy, and all of them have different personalities. Some friends like to join you for minigames such as tenpin bowling, pool, or darts, whereas others prefer to go out for a meal, get drunk, or take in a show. Of course, dates are much fussier than regular friends, and their opinions of you are influenced not only by whether you pick them up on time, where you take them, and whether you try your luck when dropping them at home, but also by a number of much more subtle factors. Dates will comment on stuff like the car you drive, how you drive it, and the clothes you wear. They’ll even notice if you wear the same outfit two dates in a row, though not all of them will be bothered by it. The rewards that you get when another character likes you enough vary depending on who it is. Without wishing to give away specifics, befriending a lawyer can prove useful if you’re having trouble with the cops, for example, and having a nurse on your friends list can literally be a lifesaver.
GTAIV’s friends invariably come with benefits. You’ll keep in touch with your dates, friends, and some of your enemies using another of GTAIV’s great new features: a cell phone. It’s hard to believe that something as simple as a cell phone could add so much to a game like this, but it’s implemented so well that it’s hard to imagine leaving any of Niko’s safe houses without it. If you’ve ever used a cell phone in real life, you’ll have no problem operating this one and, given that it’s controlled using only the D pad and a single button, it’s easy to call up acquaintances and take calls even while driving. There’s no unwieldy conversation system to deal with; you simply choose which friend you want to call, what you want to talk about (it could be work, a fun activity, or asking for a favor) and then, assuming that he or she answers the phone, the conversation plays out. Incoming calls are even easier, though they occasionally come at inopportune (or amusing) times; hearing your cell-phone’s signal interfere with your car radio is the least of your worries when you consider the possibility of a date calling you while you’re with a prostitute or embroiled in a gunfight with the Mafia. Incidentally, new ringtones and visual themes for your phone can be purchased via the in-game Internet, which is typical of the incredible attention to detail that you’ll come to take for granted as you play.

To give you some idea of just how much thought has clearly gone into the crafting of GTAIV, even the act of stealing a parked car, which is still achieved by pushing a single button, can now result in any number of different things happening. If the door is locked, as is often the case, Niko will smash a window with his elbow or his foot to get inside. Once inside the car, he may need to hot-wire it to get it started; you can speed up the process slightly by using the shoulder buttons on your controller. If the car has an alarm, it’ll sound for several seconds and cause the headlights to flash on and off as you drive away–practically begging any nearby cops to come after you. Stealing cars with drivers and/or passengers inside opens up lots more possibilities, the most amusing of which is someone (possibly you) getting an arm caught in a door and dragged along as the vehicle speeds away.

Most of the vehicles in GTAIV, like those in previous games, have very loose handling that makes it easy for you to perform Hollywood-style U-turns, skids around corners, and the like. You can play through most of the missions without ever violating a traffic law if you really want to, but you can get away with (and will have a lot more fun) driving like a lunatic, provided that you don’t collide with any police vehicles or mow down too many pedestrians. A neat touch when driving with the default camera view is that the camera, which is positioned a few feet behind the rear bumper of the car, centers on you rather than on the vehicle, effectively offering the vehicular equivalent of an over-the-shoulder view. When you take the control of something sporty, the camera also positions itself much closer to the ground, which adds to the sensation of speed. The police are rarely far away, but escaping from them is easy for the most part.
The vehicle handling is difficult to fault, regardless of whether you’re in a sports car, a garbage truck, a motorcycle, a speedboat, or a helicopter. However, while driving, you might notice one odd quirk that has been a constant ever since GTAIII: When taking the controls of certain vehicles, you’ll suddenly notice a lot more of the same vehicle on the roads. It’s not a big deal, and it isn’t detrimental to the gameplay, but it’s a little jarring if you get into one of the more unusual vehicles in the game–for example, the equivalent of either a Ferrari or a pickup truck–and suddenly find that the city is filled with them. That particular quirk is pretty common in some of the multiplayer modes as well, though you’ll likely be too busy keeping an eye out for other players to take any notice when you venture online.

Getting online in Grand Theft Auto IV couldn’t be easier. You simply select the multiplayer option on your cell phone, choose which type of game you want to host or join, and then enter a lobby and wait for the game to start. You won’t be getting bored staring at a list of names while you’re waiting, though, because when you enter a lobby you actually enter an online version of Liberty City in which you and up to 15 other players are free to do anything. There are weapons scattered all over the place to ensure that things don’t stay too friendly for very long.

There are more than a dozen different multiplayer modes to choose from, and although some of them are variations on similar themes, there’s certainly no shortage of variety. As the host of a multiplayer session, you also have the freedom to greatly customize all of the game types with variables such as friendly fire, police presence, weapons sets, traffic levels, radar functionality, and many more. You can choose where you’d like your game to take place as well, considering that many gameplay modes can be played either on a specific Liberty City island or across the entire map.

Even conventional 16-player modes such as Deathmatch and Race feel quite different than anything that you’ve played before. And in addition to those, there are objective-based games in which you’re tasked with completing missions similar to those in the single-player game: a team-based Cops ‘n Crooks mode, a Turf War mode in which teams compete for control of territories, a carjacking mode, three cooperative missions that support up to four players, and more. With the right group of people, there’s no reason why you can’t have a lot of fun with every single mode that’s available. We experienced a few frame-rate issues and lag that caused other players and their vehicles to jump around the screen at times, but for the most part GTAIV’s online play is a real treat. One especially neat touch is that, as a passenger in a vehicle being driven by another player, you can mark waypoints on the GPS system for your driver using a map that tracks the locations of other players and objectives.
Multiplayer games are an opportunity for up to 16 players to get together in Liberty City.

If you’re wondering about differences between the PlayStation 3 and Xbox 360 versions of Grand Theft Auto IV, the truth is that there aren’t many. The PS3 version can only be played after a mandatory install that takes around 10 minutes, and its load times are a little shorter and less frequent as a result. The visuals, which don’t always hold up to close scrutiny but are impressive during typical gameplay, are comparable and feature the same quirks (shadows that flicker, for example) on both consoles. Likewise, the audio, which can take a lot of the credit for why Liberty City feels so alive, is exceptional regardless of which console you have and how many speakers it’s hooked up to. True to form, GTAIV’s soundtrack has plenty of great licensed songs and, unlike other games we could mention, it doesn’t force the artist and track information down your throat with pop-up windows that detract from gameplay. However, if you want that information, you can simply dial up a song-recognition service on your cell phone and, after a few seconds, receive it in a text message. Genius.

In case you haven’t guessed already, Grand Theft Auto IV is a game that you simply have to play. The single-player game, which you can still play long after you complete the story, is the series’ best by far, and the multiplayer features are good enough that you’ll likely have no problem finding people to play with for many months to come. The minor flaws that you’ll experience are no more difficult to overlook than those in previous GTA games, and they’re greatly outnumbered by the features that will impress and surprise you anytime you think you’ve already seen everything that the game has to offer. There’s lots to see in Liberty City, so you’d best get started.

Get it now by clicking here: <http://www.game-deals.net/GTA4