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Saturday, 30 November 2013

Need For Speed Rivals Review

Need for Speed Rivals:
Available on Xbox one, Xbox one, PS4, PS3, Pc

This year very special for the NFS franchise because rivals has come the 20th instalment in the series. However the, latest games were not so good as we wanted to see them. Will the 20th instalment become the rebirth of the series? let's try to question the answer of this Rivals Review.



















The basic setup takes the best from Need for Speed: Most Wanted and Need for Speed: Hot Pursuit. Like the former, it focuses on the war between cops and illegal racers over vast stretches of open road – in this case 100 miles of dirt and tarmac crossing the fictional Redview County. Like Most Wanted the open world is packed with ready-made events, which you can trigger as you pass through their markers with a tap of a bumper. Like Hot Pursuit, it has careers for both cops and racers, giving you two different sets of events, missions, cars to unlock and ‘pursuit tech’ upgrades to install. 


To succeed with the new instalment, the developers have decided to keep to the beaten track and have chosen already popular and proven scenario. That's why Need for Speed Rivals game looks like one of the previous instalment in the series - Hot Pursuit. This decision is both good and bad for the fans. On the one hand, the competition between cops and racers is exciting, enjoying and entertaining. From the other hand - we have already seen it too many times. But let's forgive the developers for the reiteration, because it is actually not so simple to create the unique plot in racing simulator after 19 similar games. 


Playing as a racer, you need to complete different tasks (in the game these missions are instead of levels), get as much Speed Points - in-game currency - as possible, win several races and don't get caught by policemen. The cops are hunting and trying to catch the racers, and if they succeed, then the points of the lawbreaker are coming to the representative of the law.

Source

Need For Speed Trailer



Friday, 29 November 2013

Kim Dotcom’s cloud service Mega launches iPhone app, gives 50GB encrypted storage free

Popular cloud storage service, Mega launches iPhone app tha let us access the file storage from the service Services, while you re on the go

Mega was created by internet personality kim Dotcom's after his previous file-sharing service Mega-Upload was shutdown by US DoJ. the service is fairly similar to Dropbox, Skydrive etc. but boasts of superior encryption and security Msot Important Its give 50 GB Free space campare to Dropbox 2 GB
and Skydrive 7 GB storage quota. 50 GB isn't enough you can upgrade to the $10.99/month  ($119/year) for 500 GB Storage.

Download Link:

Mega app For iPhone download free click here

Thursday, 28 November 2013

Cut the rope time travel review


Join Om Nom as he travels back in time to feed his ancestors with candy. Cut the Rope: Time Travel is a completely new adventure filled with time-traveling, candy-crunching, physics-based action!
There’s no time to waste! Visit six exciting locations including the Middle Ages, the Renaissance, a Pirate Ship, Ancient Egypt, Ancient Greece, the Stone Age, and Disco Era. Om Nom’s ancestors are waiting – and they’re getting really hungry for candy!

Click here to download for apk

Click here to download for iOS

Wednesday, 27 November 2013

Where's My Water 2 Review


Where My Water 2

I'm a pretty huge Where's My Water? fan. I've beaten every course on every iteration of the game, and it's my perfect go-to for when I have a few extra minutes to kill. Those were paid apps with meaty expansions though, and now Disney has seen fit to offer up a freemium-filled sequel. But while the IAP system, an insistence of Facebook Connect, and the freemium makeover in Where's My Water? 2 [Free] feel highly forced, it's still mostly the same old Swampy we know and love. Mostly.
Don't get too excited, as you're still going to be digging through dirt to get water to a bathtub, so not much has changed fundamentally. As always, there are three ducks in each level to collect, and this time, you pretty much need to get as many as possible to unlock level gates. Yep, unlike past iterations where you could skip levels at your leisure, you have to actually ace some levels to progress to a new set. For veterans like me it's not really an issue, but I can see more casual players getting pretty frustrated -- because after all, the beauty of the original games is the fact that you could play them at your own pace.

Gameplay-wise the 100 levels on offer have a bit more variety this time around instead of your standard "water to tub" puzzles. There are now levels where you have to avoid collecting any ducks, in addition to upside-down stages, and special challenges like leading a stream of water through a constantly scrolling screen (multi-touch, a feature that's always been in the series, really shines here). The Mystery Duck levels from the original's add-on campaign also return, and are as enjoyable as ever. As a whole it's not nearly as strong as what I'd consider to be the best game in the series (that honor goes toWhere’s My Mickey?), but it's still a ton of fun nonetheless.

But not all is well in Swampy-Land, as I ran into some annoyances along the way. For one, Facebook Connect is constantly in your face after every level, and it's even a lingering presence on the map screen. Sadly, Where's My Water? 2 constantly pesters you to reach out to your friends to refill your energy and even unlock more content late-game. If you absolutely hate this "feature," odds are you'll uninstall the game before you put up with it more than once -- or just outright refuse to install it.
The other potential issue is energy. Yes, an energy timer is in Where's My Water? 2. Even if you can pretty much play at your leisure early on, it's puzzling to think why, after multiple successful fully paid iterations, that Disney would inject a freemium scheme into the franchise.

Click Here to download  

Tuesday, 26 November 2013

Grand Theft Auto 5 (Gta)5 Release date in India

Grand Theft auto will contain only Los Santos and its surroundings. As a reminder, Los Santos was a caricature of the real Los Angeles. Rockstar that GTA 5 will we title the largest and most ambitious ever undertaken by studio

Release date in India- 17 September 2013
Pc Release date- Not announced 
Platform- Xbox 360  and PS3

Price in India 
PC-Unknown 
PS3- Rs 2,999 (Buy Gta 5 For PS3)
Xbox-360-Rs 2,999 (Buy Gta 5 for Xbox-360)


Click Here to view video

Micromax Canvas 2 Rom Installing Steps by CWM


Steps to Install Rom On Canvas 2


Requirements
  • 60% charged Micromax Canvas 2
  • Rooted and CWM recovery installed 
Dark nexus-Custom Rom Dark nexus for canvas 2

How to install Custom Rom On Micromax Canvas 2
  • Click On the Above Link Dark Nexus.zip Rom Download 
  • Switch Off your Phone and boot in CWM recovery mode by pressing and holding VOLUME UP + POWER KEY for 10 seconds
  • Select WIPE data/Factory reset > YES to perform a data wipe
  • Come back to main menu, Select Wipe cache partition > YES to confirm it.
  • Go to mount and format system
  • Back to main menu Select > Advanced > Wipe dalvik cache > YES
  • Again Back to main menu and Select Install zip from SD card choose > Dark nexus Custom Rom for canvas 2 > YES confirm flashing After 5-10 MIN Rom will installed Sucessfull
  • Select > Advanced > Wipe Dalvik cache > YES 
  • Select Reboot System 
  • After you will reboot system your Phone will be take 10 minutes or more to start Phone for the frist time so don't pull on the panic

Ryse: Son of Rome Review


Ryse: Son of Rome is huge in scale, but small in scope. For all the stunning spectacle it throws at you--the sight of a hundred-strong army laying bloody waste to a barbarian horde, the march of a legion as hulking great fireballs rain down from the sky--your part in it all is that of an outlier, a lone wolf single-handedly trying to save a crumbling empire. What you're left with, then, are the scraps: small melee battles against a procession of mindless opponents who you slaughter in painfully shallow third-person combat. Launch titles for new consoles can be hit or miss, but while Ryse might not be the most innovative game I’ve ever seen, man, is it beautiful. Every locale you find yourself in -- from the rocky beaches of the British isles to the marble spectacle of the Colisseum to Rome’s grimy slums is rendered with a lush depth that’s possible only with a next-gen console. On an HD screen, the images really are breathtaking.
Even the gruesome stabs and bloody dismemberments of hero Marius' quick-time finishing moves do little to ease the banality of it all. Blood is spilled with such ferocious regularity in Ryse that what was once shocking and impressive is soon reduced to just another repetitive sight to endure. Killing enemies is less and less satisfying every time you lop off another limb, and for a game that's all about the combat, that's a really big problem. And so battles quickly blur into one another as you're endlessly marched from one small group of opponents to another, spilling litres of barbarian blood along the way. The odd turret defense mission and sections where you march a small legion towards a tower--raising shields to avoid a flurry of fiery arrows along the way--do their best to mix things up, but these moments are short-lived and so painfully easy that you feel like you might as well not be in control of the game at all. Even the moments when it seems like the game is drawing you into the larger fight offer only the illusion of control.