Looks exactly like the last CS in terms of style.
Which is what every CS fan wanted anyway, so meh.
Which is what every CS fan wanted anyway, so meh.
TBH, BLOPS zombies gets old real fast. Also, people on the 360 are retarded, so unless you have friends who play consistently. Not worth it.Kimmmmmmmmmmmm wrote:
Everyone play Call of Duty on the 360 now.. spec: the multiplyr zombies game. worth buyin?
Personally, I'm not surprised.Yahoo Games wrote:
GameStop under fire for removing free coupons from Deus Ex: Human Revolution
The battle over digital game distribution just took a turn for the ugly.
Video game retail giant GameStop has been opening up brand new PC game boxes of the critically-acclaimed shooter Deus Ex: Human Revolution and removing packed-in coupons granting free copies of the game to users of the OnLive cloud gaming service.
OnLive and Deus Ex publisher Square Enix announced the coupon deal yesterday, which would let buyers of a boxed PC copy download and play another copy of the game, for free, via OnLive's cloud based network, a $50 value.
But apparently GameStop, which has its own digital distribution platform, wasn't on board with what it believes is helping to promote the competition. A letter sent out to GameStop employees instructing them to "immediately remove and discard the OnLive coupon from all the regular PC versions of Deus Ex: Human Revolution" has been widely circulated, and GameStop has since officially confirmed the practice.
"Regarding the Deus Ex OnLive Codes: GameStop's policy is that we do not promote competitive services without a formal partnership," GameStop says on its Facebook page. "Square Enix packed a competitor's coupon within the PC version of Deus Ex: Human Revolution without our prior knowledge and we did pull these coupons."
It's pretty upsetting news for those who like to believe that when they buy a new product, they are actually, you know, buying a new product. Knowing a retailer tampered with a game box simply to thwart a promotion geared at saving gamers money is, to say the least, a little worrying.
GameStop, however, assures you that while they're breaking the seal on your new game box, your game itself should be fine.
"While the new products may be opened, we fully guarantee the condition of the discs to be new. If you find this to not be the case, please contact the store where the game was purchased and they will further assist," the company states.
So is it illegal? That's a bit fuzzy. Wired reports that Square Enix and OnLive might be able to make a case for "tortious interference," which occurs when one party intentionally damages another party's contractual or business relationships.
GameStop has raised the ire of gamers before. Just last year, the company was hit with a class-action lawsuit over what consumers considered deceptive used game sales.
Square Enix and OnLive have yet to formally respond.
Many box-copy games sold can be downloaded from steam via CD key nowadays, so I still don't see why Gamestop has a problem with this.requote wrote:
OnLive and Deus Ex publisher Square Enix announced the coupon deal yesterday, which would let buyers of a boxed PC copy download and play another copy of the game, for free, via OnLive's cloud based network, a $50 value.
But apparently GameStop, which has its own digital distribution platform, wasn't on board with what it believes is helping to promote the competition. A letter sent out to GameStop employees instructing them to "immediately remove and discard the OnLive coupon from all the regular PC versions of Deus Ex: Human Revolution" has been widely circulated, and GameStop has since officially confirmed the practice.
Think of it this way.unnamednewbie13 wrote:
~
According to RPS GameStop has its own game streaming service, so the OnLive copy is a direct competitor.unnamednewbie13 wrote:
Many box-copy games sold can be downloaded from steam via CD key nowadays, so I still don't see why Gamestop has a problem with this.
They bought Impulse a few months back.Sisco wrote:
According to RPS GameStop has its own game streaming service, so the OnLive copy is a direct competitor.unnamednewbie13 wrote:
Many box-copy games sold can be downloaded from steam via CD key nowadays, so I still don't see why Gamestop has a problem with this.
how is it?RTHKI wrote:
finally
I dont think anyone anywhere that doesnt work for gamestop has argued that taking the codes out is a good thing. Of course it is greedy corporate bullshit but gamestop has a reputation for being shit like that so I am no surprised.unnamednewbie13 wrote:
I suppose they can do whatever they want with copies they sell on Impulse. They could have even been cool and given people Impulse keys with retail copies of Deus Ex HR.
What they shouldn't do is strip down box content. Everything I've learned about honest retail cries out against it. It'd be like removing driver discs from retail box video cards, closing it back up and selling it as the complete product. As mentioned before, I already have reason to be suspicious of Gamestop. This is just another jab.
Last edited by henno13 (2011-09-02 13:10:23)
It's AO and it says it's coming for 360/PS3... yet Sony and Microsoft both don't allow AO games on their system IIRC. Probably fake.Sisco wrote:
I highly doubt that´s real...