VGXpo Coverage 2005
Hargosh visits VGXpo this week and meets the father of video games Ralph Baer, plus relives all those great arcade and console games of yesteryear.
Hargosh visits VGXpo this week and meets the father of video games Ralph Baer, plus relives all those great arcade and console games of yesteryear.
Faced with not too many great titles, Sony is taking matters into its own hands with the release of two games in the brand new Platform Publishing line.
You would not think a 93-minute movie could be turned into an exciting 10-hour game, but Rockstar does the impossible (again) with The Warriors.
Reliving the glory days of the arcade seems to be gaining in popularity by leaps and bounds, and Capcom Classics lives up to the white hot genre.
The holiday season is just really starting, but Todd and other gamers are not thinking of sugar plums. They are thinking about new GAMES.
While combining a fighting game with an RPG sounds really cool, Beatdown is just not the way to get it done.
The NFL and EA may think they have the football genre locked up, but lookout for the hard hitting action of Blitz: The League, the first real contender to standup to the franchise juggernaut.
Taking and awesome game like Burnout 3 and improving it is hard work, but that is exactly what Criterion did, with more crash action.
The NHL is desperate to woo its fans back following the lockout, but in the game world they still have not even fixed the rosters.
In The Groove looks at first like any number of dance titles on the market, but the gameplay and replay ability is much stronger here.