General Gaming Article |
- Rig of the Month: Parvum Titanfall
- DFC Intelligence: Nearly All PC Game Sales are Digital Downloads
- Barnes and Noble Rolls Out Samsung Galaxy Tab 4 Nook for $179
- Steve Ballmer Leaves Microsoft's Board to Focus Energy on Los Angeles Clippers
- Acer Introduces a Pair of Space Saving Veriton Desktop PCs
- Broken Age Review
- Lenovo Adds Three Business Class Desktop PCs to ThinkCentre Line
- Newegg Daily Deals: NZXT's New H440 Steel Mid Tower Case, LG 34-inch UltraWide Monitor, and More!
Rig of the Month: Parvum Titanfall Posted: 20 Aug 2014 02:38 PM PDT An amazing machine that's straight out of TitanfallThis month's Rig of the Month is a bit different. Instead of pulling from reader submissions, we've reached out to James Walter, who recently completed his latest build: Parvum Titanfall. Based on the design of the limited-edition Xbox One Titanfall controller, Parvum Titanfall is a masterclass in clean, crisp PC building. From the moment James saw the orange, white, and black controller he was immediately inspired to create a matching rig. After finishing a Robocop-inspired, full-tower build, he set out to find the right platform to work with. The Parvum Systems S2.0 was his final choice because of a proposed partnership: Parvum would provide a custom S2.0 built to James's specs. With Parvum onboard, the project continued with Swiftech, Ensourced Sleeved Cables, Mayhem's Dyes, and ColdZero. With plenty of hours logged in Titanfall, James decided to create something straight out of the Titanfall universe. A computer—"a sort of Dell of the Titanfall universe,"—that could very well have been made by Hammond Robotics. The military theme, serial numbers, and paintwork are the result of James's initial decision. The custom-painted motherboard armor, radiators, and other parts mesh well with the predominantly white case. James used a Silhouette-brand craft cutter to fabricate all of the extra ornaments—serial numbers, barcodes, and the like. Little details like colored vinyl set into the grooves of the case and the Mayhem's Aurora 2 Supernova liquid-dyed to a deep orange really complete the build. As beautiful as the rig is on the outside, the system itself is equally impressive when you factor in the sheer number of water-cooling components. There's an EK CPU block, RAM block, and two GPU blocks as well as a Swiftech pump, a Bitspower reservoir, two EK radiators, and a bunch of fans. The system components include an Intel i5-4670K that sits on an Asus Gryphon Z87, 8GB of Corsair Dominator GT memory, two EVGA GTX 770 Superclockeds, a 250GB Samsung EVO SSD, and a Corsair AX860 power supply. The reception to the finished rig has been so great that James and Parvum will be teaming up again for another game-themed build. Stay tuned to James's Facebook for details on the upcoming Call of Duty: Advanced Warfare build. Have a case mod of your own that you would like to submit to our monthly feature? Make sure to read the rules/tips here and email us at mpcrigofthemonth@gmail.com with your submissions. |
DFC Intelligence: Nearly All PC Game Sales are Digital Downloads Posted: 20 Aug 2014 10:15 AM PDT |
Barnes and Noble Rolls Out Samsung Galaxy Tab 4 Nook for $179 Posted: 20 Aug 2014 09:42 AM PDT |
Steve Ballmer Leaves Microsoft's Board to Focus Energy on Los Angeles Clippers Posted: 20 Aug 2014 08:54 AM PDT |
Acer Introduces a Pair of Space Saving Veriton Desktop PCs Posted: 20 Aug 2014 08:14 AM PDT |
Posted: 20 Aug 2014 07:57 AM PDT Two stories, tons of creativity, yummy ice cream, no grogThat's fair advice for the half of you who will start out Broken Age in a miserable funk instead of a monster-filled fairy tale. At least, that's how we felt when we initially began our trip through Tim Schafer's imaginative title—the first half of a two-part, point-and-click adventure from the industry veteran whose previous credits stand well on their own within the genre: Day of the Tentacle, The Secret of Monkey Island, Full Throttle, et cetera. The game splits the two protagonists' (seemingly) separate story lines right from the start. We started our journey with the boy, Shay, but found the initial ramp-up to his adventure a bit too convincing. It's no Mystery Science Theater movie warning, that's for sure. Without spoiling too much of the plot, Shay is trapped on a spaceship that goes above and beyond to protect him from the harshness of growing up. Shay could not be any more apathetic to the idea of daily life with his "mother," a benevolent, computerized AI of sorts, who washes him, feeds him his daily cereal, and sends him on "adventures" that end in hugs, piles of ice cream, and, most likely, a bout of depression. The other protagonist of this half-game, Vella, presents a more compelling story line. In this case, you're playing the classic damsel in distress. Rather than being eaten by a giant monster as part of her town's sacrificial ritual to avoid destruction, she decides to go on a one-woman crusade to slay said monster herself. While Vella's story line is a bit more action-packed—or at least, feels more so as a result of its classic slay-the-dragon-like premise—we actually found ourselves more proud of our experience in Shay's adventure. Our favorite moment involved trying to find a way to "kill" our character, for lack of a better way to say it, in order to see if his daily monotony could be averted somehow. Spoiler: It can. That's the most challenging example of the game's puzzles that we could come up with, as Broken Age feels perfectly balanced between "breeze on by" and "consult game FAQs" for its overall difficulty. You get just enough quirky items to keep you thinking about what goes where without feeling overwhelmed with options—this isn't a 20-item-inventory, combine-every-gizmo kind of adventure title. While Broken Age features no hint system, which might frustrate those looking for an extra boost or two in some head-scratching moments, you do have the option to switch between the two separate"story lines at a moment's notice. Think Day of the Tentacle, only, your actions in the two stories don't affect each other—a somewhat curious oversight that we hope developer Double Fine Productions changes up in the game's second half. There's no real point to spending much time talking about the game's graphics, as you'll fall in love with the beautiful visuals the moment you start adventuring. Kudos to Broken Age's original orchestration as well—it's the bread keeping the delicious presentation together. Sharp writing, endless wit, and excellent characterization (with similarly awesome voice talent) all work in tandem to deliver a welcome arrival to a genre whose blockbuster titles are not always at the forefront of gamers' minds. You won't forget Broken Age; in fact, we think you'll be clamoring for quite a while to see how chapter one's big cliffhanger ends up. More, Tim Schafer! More! $25, www.brokenagegame.com, ESRB: n/a |
Lenovo Adds Three Business Class Desktop PCs to ThinkCentre Line Posted: 20 Aug 2014 06:00 AM PDT |
Newegg Daily Deals: NZXT's New H440 Steel Mid Tower Case, LG 34-inch UltraWide Monitor, and More! Posted: 20 Aug 2014 06:00 AM PDT Top Deal: On your mark, get set, build! Go, go, go, put that PC together! What's that you say, you're missing a computer case? Oh dear, that is certainly a problem. Lucky for you, we're problem solvers. If you're need of a computer case, then direct your eyeballs to today's top deal for NZXT's new H440 Steel Mid Tower Chassis for $100 with free shipping (normally $120 - use coupon code: [EMCPBWA33]; additional $10 mail-in-rebate). It supports both 140mm and 12mm fans, the stell top and front panels come Kraken-ready and fit radiators up to 360mm in size, there's lots of room to tuck unruly cables at the bottom of the case, and other modern amenities. Other Deals: Intel Core i5-3570K Ivy Bridge Quad-Core 3.4GHz (3.8GHz Turbo) LGA 1155 77W Desktop Processor for $220 with free shipping (normally $230 - use coupon code: [EMCPBWA27]) LG 34-inch 5ms(GTG) Dual HDMI 21:9 UltraWide LED Backlight LCD Monitor IPS Panel 300 for $580 with free shipping (normally $600 - use coupon code: [EMCPBWA34]) G.Skill Ripjaws X Series 16GB (4 x 4GB) 240-Pin DDR3 1600 (PC3 12800) Desktop Memory for $153 with free shipping (normally $170 - use coupon code: [EMCPBWA39]) Seagate NAS HDD 2TB 64MB Cache SATA 6.0Gb/s Internal Hard Drive for $90 with free shipping (normally $100 - use coupon code: [EMCPBWA99]) |
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