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what day did xbox 360 come out
By admin | December 26, 2006
what day did xbox 360 come out
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![]() TBS 2122 01 XBox 360 Headset TBS 2122 01 US $126.92
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PowerUp Heroes (Xbox 360) $19.99 The world is in peril! This looks like a job for... you?!? Yep, Superman won't be swooping in to save the day this time, and neither will Spider-Man, Batman or the X-Men. It's all on YOU. PowerUp Heroes enables you to suit up your Xbox Avatar and send it out to fight with a range of superpowers to save the planet. It's full-body beat-'em-up action as players use Kinect to make themselves the controller. As well as one-on-one matches against the AI, players can duke it out locally or online against a friend, or even enter a four-player tournament. As you take down each opponent, you'll inherit their super suit and the powers that come with it ready for the next battle. There are 20 suits in all to collect, including the likes of the Necromancer, that enables you to control a horde of skeletons, or the Mentalist, which enables the player to crack an enemy's mind. It's time to step up and show the world what you're made of! |
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When the Stars Come Out skin for Microsoft Xbox 360 Wireless Controller $14.99 When the Stars Come Out skin by Skinit.com. Fits Microsoft Xbox 360 Wireless Controller. View this and other covers, skins & case accessories at Skinit. |
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When the Stars Come Out skin for Microsoft Xbox 360 Slim (2010) $29.99 When the Stars Come Out skin by Skinit.com. Fits Microsoft Xbox 360 Slim (2010). View this and other covers, skins & case accessories at Skinit. |
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When the Stars Come Out skin for Microsoft Xbox 360 (Includes HDD) $29.99 When the Stars Come Out skin by Skinit.com. Fits Microsoft Xbox 360 (Includes HDD). View this and other covers, skins & case accessories at Skinit. |
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Strictly Come Dancing.(2012)( 2012) (Xbox 360) $39.99 Strictly Come Dancing.(2012)( 2012) (Xbox 360) |
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MADDEN NFL 12 for Xbox 360 $59.99 Not just for Sunday anymore; now you can enjoy football every day of the week with Madden NFL 12 for Xbox 360 . Stop yelling at the TV and put yourself in another player's cleats for the most realistic football gaming experience yet! Madden NFL 12 brings you closer to NFL football than ever before with 32 NFL teams, stadiums, and every player in the league-all with the level of authenticity that fans have come to expect. Test your football skills against friends in your living room or online with Dynamic Player Performance, where no two players play alike. Each player's skills and confidence will either rise or fall based on his performance throughout a game; further adding to the NFL experience. Even build your own fantasy football team in Madden Ultimate Team mode and lead your team to Super Bowl victory in Franchise Mode! Why just watch the pros play when you can get in the game yourself and show them how it's done. Get Madden NFL 12 and prove you have what it takes to play with the best. Game Features Maximum Number of Players: 1 to 6 Online Play: Yes Compatibility: Xbox 360 Manufacturer: Electronic Arts Category: Sports Subcategory: N/A ESRB Rating: Everyone(10+) ESRB Content Descriptors: N/A |
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L A Noire (Xbox 360) $19.99 Rockstar Games, notable for Grand Theft Auto and the more recent Red Dead Redemption, takes a step into the film noire detective genre of the 1940s made famous by films such as LA Confidential and books such as The Black Dahlia. While LA Noire retains the adult-only themes and violence of GTA, its main character detective Cole Phelps (played by Aaron Staton from TV hit Mad Men) fights for the law rather than against it. He walks the mean streets of Los Angeles in 1947 having joined the LAPD in order to absolve himself from the things he did – or was forced to do – as a US GI in World War II. Featuring a fully-realised LA from the period, the game sees Phelps and various partners carrying out investigative roles assigned to him in various departments of the LAPD. The player must use their wit, intelligence and – given Rockstar Bondi studios ground-breaking facial motion caption and animation work – their ability to recognise a liar from a truth teller to solve a variety of unspeakable crimes. Using a massive array of characters – each of which is meticulously animated with professional voice acting - LA Noire also has classic Rockstar Games’ touches with car driving (and of course chases), gun fights, brawling, strictly adult themes and a deep plot to work through. Additionally, clue solving gets more difficult as the game progresses, meaning that the online ‘Ask the Community’ elements come into play. |
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Blood Drive (Xbox 360) $12.99 So, every gamer loves cars, post-apocalyptic environments, zombies and driving fast. That's the rules. Therefore putting all those together in gladiatorial arena would appear to be spot on. Activision has done just that with Blood Drive. What we have here is a virtually televised game show in which contestants have to drive – as fast and as a meanly as possible – around those Post-Apocalyptic arenas. The zombie action comes in as contestants vie with other to see how many of the undead frat boys, police officers, strippers and bachelorette partiers they can take out... and not in a come on a date way. In more of a run them down fast way. Although each of the zombie types comes with its own special abilities to deal death to the gamer and the other contestants, each one also comes with its own special way to die horrible, horrible deaths. For their part, however, the player also has the choice of vehicle to do their own damage. These vary from heavily armed muscle cars to heavily armed hot rods and everything in between. With six different environments to play in, there are both single and multi-player modes (up to four players at once using drop-in/drop-out play). |
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Catherine(2012) (Xbox 360) $24.99 What's it to be? Your safe, steady, best gal of five years, or the blonde bombshell who's trying to tempt you away? Most of us haven't actually had to face this problem, but hopefully if we do it won't come complete with fast-paced puzzles that involve us scaling an ever-shifting tower of blocks. Yes, Vincent (our protagonist) is most certainly up against it. And yes, Catherine is a rather odd beast. By day (the game world's day, that is) it's a dating simulator of the kind we don't often get over here. Vincent seems to have everything a chap could want from a relationship – a smart, successful and beautiful girlfriend and a good, steady thing going with her. She's started talking about the long term, though. Things are getting serious and Vincent's getting worried. Foolishly, he's gone out and gotten drunk, only to wake up next to the sexy, seductive Katherine. Gamers follow a week in the life of Vincent, navigating conversations and text messages as he tries to sort his life out. By night, however, Vincent is tormented by nightmares – something else that will require the player's attention. He must climb a tower of blocks, with successive rows disappearing beneath him. Think of it as 3D Tetris with a poor little bloke stuck inside it. To make matters worse, blocks will be missing. And they might have spikes in them or they might be prone to exploding. It's up to the player, through the medium of Vincent, to move them around so he can progress. Any way you slice it, Vincent is not your average puzzle game! Produced: 2012 |
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Capcom 33001 Dead Rising Xbox 360 Game $27.17 MODEL 33001 VENDOR CAPCOM FEATURES Dead Rising X360 Dead Rising follows the harrowing tale of Frank West an overly zealous freelance photojournalist on a hunt for the scoop of a lifetime. In pursuit of a juicy lead he makes his way to a small suburban town only to find that it has become overrun by zombies. He escapes to the local shopping mall thinking it will be a bastion of safety but it turns out to be anything but. Take the lead as Frank and engage in a struggle to survive the endless stream of enemies. With a full compliment of stores at your disposal in the mall you will need to be creativeutilizing anything you can find to fight off the fleshhungry moband search for the truth behind the horrendous epidemic. Realtime gameplay: Time marches on whether Frank is actively engaged or simply stationary. Dynamic enemies: Record numbers of zombies come in neverending waves and react to their environment. Though they move slowly during the day the zombies become stronger and faster at night making it even more dangerous for players to survive. These former humans have also retained some memory of their previous lives giving them unique behaviors and appearances. Visual clarity: Playing in native 720p resolution allows for unprecedented detail and clarity in gameplay. Weapons aplenty: The variety of stores available to you in the mall offer an endless supply of resources including vehicles makeshift weapons and food. Save and learn: Encounter other survivors along the way. Helping them will give you more clues as to what has happened and what you need to do to stop it. SPECIFICATIONs ESRB Rating : M for MatureGenre/Category : ShooterSystem : Xbox 360Number of Players : 1OnLine Compatible: NoMANUFACTURER WARRANTY:nbsp;nbsp;90 DAYS |
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Xbox 360 4GB Console $199.99 Experience the new Xbox 360 4GB Console at an affordable price. Here today, ready for tomorrow with a brand new, leaner machine! Explore the world of entertainment through Xbox LIVE, where HD movies and TV stream in an instant with built-in Wi-Fi. Plus, the 4GB Xbox is ready for the controller-free revolution of Kinect - you don't just play the game, you are the game. Xbox 360 is more games, entertainment and fun. Xbox 360 has blockbuster games, HD movies and controller-free fun for everyone. Features Built-in Wi-Fi for easy connection to Xbox LIVE Super quiet with sleek new design plus matching controller Ready for the controller-free fun of Kinect Kinect Ready gives you a completely controller-free experience where you don't just play video games; you are the video game. Easy to use and loads of fun it will get everyone off the couch and into the action. See a ball? Kick it. Want to join in the fun of someone else's game? Simply jump in. Kinect Ready even lets you control an HD movie with the wave of a hand. Don't forget to check out all the cool Xbox accessories The Source offers. Get extra Xbox controllers , New Xbox games , Xbox hard drives and more. What's in the box Black Xbox 360 with 4GB of flash memory 1 black wireless controller Composite A/V cable (standard definition) 1 Year limited warranty |
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Rogue Warrior (Xbox 360) $9.99 Infiltration, guns, lots of swearing and the hardest man you're ever likely to come across. Rogue Warrior is described by publisher Bethesda as a "personality-driven shooter" - what Hollywood used to called a "star vehicle". It features former real-life Navy SEAL Richard 'Demo Dick' Marcinko, voiced by Mickey Rourke, getting up to the kind of sneaky, blacker than black ops its real life star is famous for. The game is set in the 1980s, when Marcinko was still a relative youngster, and focuses on a fictional campaign in which Demo Dick is trying to stop anti-ballistic missiles passing from North Korea to Russia. As the game progresses, things go awry and, having been told to stand down for reasons that are unclear, Dick goes rogue. In any given mission, you're likely to find two stages of play. First up is stealth. You have an armload of different stealthy kill moves to make use of as you sneak your way through a scenario. The environment also comes into play. Shooting out a light is an easy way to disorient an enemy before delivering a kill. An even better way to do it is take out a fuse box and plunge the entire building (a warehouse, in this case) into darkness, switching to night vision as you do it. The opposing soldiers, however, might well have a vague idea of what's going on. In pretty much all of the missions, expect things go south. As Dick is wont to say – no plan survives contact with the enemy. That brings you to the second stage of play; combat. Dick is left to shoot his way out of the various missions, with battles getting pretty frenetic as the obligatory oil drums go "boom!" The game naturally features online multiplayer – a staple feature of any shooter these days. Get ready to fight some terrorists Demo Dick style! |
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Lego Indiana Jones: The Original Adventures (Xbox 360) $12.99 Did you used to spend hours wondering what it would be like if, in the opening sequence of Raiders of the Lost Ark, Indiana Jones had to evade a tumbling ball of LEGO instead of rock (or possibly papier mache, depending on what they were using for the special effects back then)? No? Was that just us...? Well, in any case, Traveller's Tales has answered the question for us with Lego Indiana Jones: The Original Adventures. In a nutshell, Indiana Jones and his supporting cast have been given the same treatment as the Star Wars crew - they've been made all blocky. Players get to re-enact the entire first three Indy films as characters made out of LEGO in a LEGO environment faced by threats made out of LEGO. Get the gist? So, it's off to the jungles of South America, the mountaintops of India and even the home of the Holy Grail with everyone's favourite fedora-wearing archaeologist adventurer. Along the way, players will have the help of Dr Jones' supporting cast, including the likes of Marion Ravenwood and Short Round. Players will be able to swap between them at will, even combining body parts to create brand new heroes. If you like your adventures to come in customisable brick form, this one's for you. |
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Darksiders (Xbox 360) $12.99 Post-apocalyptic settings seem to be the bread and butter of action/adventure-based games these days. It could be that it's a product of the ambiguous times we live in, but games makers seem to be a little bit obsessed with the End of the World as We Know it. Seldom has there been so literal an embodiment of that mentality as in Darksiders, however. The Apocalypse has happened. We're not talking the nuclear kind, or the alien attack kind or the swine flu kind. We're talking the full-on, biblical four horsemen kind. That's your REAL Apocalypse. Thing is, it's come a bit off schedule. Read: early. War (the horseman) was found at the scene and he's taking the blame for it. Determined to get to the bottom of it all, off he trots to drill down through all the mystery and get to The Truth. When you're War, however, it's not about asking questions and putting the clues together, it's about messing people up with your Great Big Sword. It's about hack-'n'-slash brawling, exploration and puzzling. The action plays out largely as a mixture of brawling and light platforming. Players overcome all manner of undead, demony monsters, and they have quite an arsenal to do it with. For example, you've got chains that might look familiar if you've played God of War. These can be used to not just take out enemies, but to manipulate the environment. There's also the X Blabe, a typically-massive tool that, once thrown, will return to you. It can also pick up environmental effects such as flames. You get the idea. Also up for grabs is an ever-growing array of abilities, such as some ethereal wings that can be used for gliding – helpful for exploration and platforming – and the blade geyser which sees (great big!) pointy things shooting from the ground around War. You're going to need the whole lot, too, because the boss battles are nothing short of epic... On top of all that there's plenty to explore, with huge great sprawling levels littered with physics-based puzzles to bend your head around. So, what's War good for? Darksiders, that's what. |
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Borderlands (Xbox 360) $14.99 Borderlands is a futuristic science fiction first person shooter with role playing elements from Gearbox Software, who previously created the Brothers in Arms series of games. The game seeks to move FPS games on from the evolutionary cul-de-sac some people believe them to currently inhabit. Borderlands is set on Pandora, a planet at the edge of the galaxy where colonists have been drawn by the expectation of vast mineral wealth. However, when the planet turns out to be barren, the rich leave, and the poor are abandoned to chaos and lawlessness: a futuristic wild frontier like the American old west. The remaining settlers elect to try to find and exploit abandoned alien technology as their route to getting off this forsaken planet. Pandora's vicious indigenous life-forms decide that the settlers look like an appealing snack. In this hostile and dangerous environment, you play as a mercenary treasure hunter. And here the RPG elements of the game come into play - to establish the trust of the locals, you have to undertake missions to win their favour. These may be collecting or hunting missions.... and while this aspect of the game is similar to role playing games, the focus is very much on real time 3D action. The game continues in this vein: there is a main story to progress through, but there are side missions that can be followed at any time to help you gain items and experience. Experience enables players to level up, RPG style - so the game has no difficulty levels, instead featuring a scalable challenge system. If a particular battle is too tough for you, back track, complete some side-quests and then try again with improved abilities and equipment. When it comes to equipment, Borderlands has another surprise up its sleeve - a truly phenomenal amount of different weapons. A weapons "manufacturing" engine uses a randomise feature to create truly mind numbing numbers of combinations - over 600,000 different weapons, including handguns, machine guns and sniper rifles. But also with alien technology, plasma rifles and rocket launchers too. Players will always be able to search out bigger, badder and better weapons. And to avoid screeds of stats to tell you what a weapon does - they are colour coded to give you an at-a-glance idea of their capabilities. Just as the weapons of Borderlands are randomised, so is the terrain. Main locations such as towns are fixed, but the landscape between them is generated just for the game you are playing. Borderlands also has a multi-player co-operative mode, in which, any experience earned by completing missions is shared between team members equally, because everyone's skills will be required to successfully complete a mission. |
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FlatOut Ultimate Carnage (Xbox 360) $9.99 FlatOut Ultimate Carnage is perhaps one of the best examples of the smash-em up ‘Destruct-O-Racer’ genre to date. The first two outings in the FlatOut series have been well received and it’s fair to say that they have been good, solid racing games, which have appealed to fans of (virtually) smashing up cars. Basically, they did pretty much what they claimed on the box – deliver a smash-tastic arcade driving experience that involved lots of skidding about, crashing into both the other cars and the destructible buildings dotted around the tracks and, most satisfyingly of all, flinging your ragdoll driver out through the windscreen in a range of hilarious mini-games (ragdoll bowling, ragdoll darts and so on). FlatOut Ultimate Carnage has been rebuilt from the ground up and specifically developed to squeeze the best out of the Xbox 360. The game features twelve cars racing on screen at any one time, five all-new single player and two all-new multiplayer game modes over Xbox Live, and an amazing 8,000 dynamic and fully-smashable objects on each track for you to run over and smash the hell out of: tyre stacks you can scatter across the track, cardboard boxes, lampposts inviting you to destroy them - so you can smash to smithereens pretty much anything and everything you see on and around the track. The graphics, lighting and shadowing in the game really stand out, making each smash, crash and buckle just that little bit more deliciously naughty. FlatOut Ultimate Carnage is a superbly fun and highly polished arcade smash’em’up that just happens to feature some impressively realistic physics - cars that feel and behave in many ways like normal cars feel. Well, like normal cars would feel if you were an insane psychopath with a death-wish. In addition to smashing up your competitors at every possible opportunity - the more your nitro bar increases and – ultimately – the faster and more destructive you become. Bear in mind that each car has 25,000 polygons and 40 separate individually destructible parts and you get a good idea of how battered most of these cars look if they manage to make it to the third and final lap of a race, when the surrounding track environments really do look like something from a Mad Max movie. There are three types of car class on offer in the game: the beginner rust-buckets in the Derby class, the slightly more presentable (and much more powerful) Street class cars, and the behemoths in the Race class. There is also a host of different single player and multiplayer modes. The single-player experience boasts both a traditional career mode, where you can progressively pimp your car by buying upgrades as you progress through the various urban, backwoods and raceway-based tracks. Then there's Carnage mode, which is self-explanatory. It is aimed at the player who wants a quick fix of high-adrenalin carnage races and, yep, some of those hilarious ragdoll driver flinging mini-games. Finally the multiplayer mode on X |
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Bayonetta (Xbox 360) $4.99 Firing up Bayonetta, there's a fairly obvious comparison to be made – it looks a lot like Devil May Cry. While Bayonetta is not the latest DMC game, however, it is the brainchild of Hideki Kamiya, the creator of Devil May Cry. While Bayonetta is set in the same twilight demi-monde as the DMC series, instead of featuring Dante, this new game features a statuesque leather-cum-hair clad witch who carries the same name as the game. Bayonetta is a witch, and she wields the dark arts. The game's story revolves her having been missing for 500 years and then woken up with little memory of who she is. Unfortunately, she's found herself stuck in the middle of a pitched battle between good and evil, and she's on no one's side but her own. Her opponents are angels and heavenly hosts who she has to defeat on a daily basis to avoid being thrust down to hell, so the morality of the storyline is ambiguous to say the least. Bayonetta is, basically, a series of boss battles linked by a series of high-camp cut scenes. There is exploring and collecting items, but not so much that you'll actually notice it. Bayonetta is more about fighting one huge and apparently invincible monster before going on to then battle two of the same monster, with some other smaller monsters thrown in for measure. That, when you get down to it, is what Bayonetta's all about – fast, furious, all-out combat. You wield weapons from a garden-variety samurai sword to a fireball-producing heavenly horn to guns that take the place of your bootheels. When Bayonetta destroys an opponent or deformable set dressing items (plants, benches and the like) she is rewarded with collectible items and golden halos. The latter are the currency of the game, and can be spent in the 'Gates of Hell' bar and shop. Each battle results in a score and a medal. You are rewarded for combos and for not using items. You are penalised for taking damage. If you take too much damage it is possible to lose points in the course of completing a level of the game. Players might complete Bayonetta in a little over 10 hours. But it's unlikely that you'll do so with a very high score, or a collection of platinum level completion statues, so there are bucket-loads of re-playability. There are also five difficulty levels. 'Normal' is challenging, so you'll have to come back prepared and practised to complete it in the most difficult mode. It's also worth noting that there's an ultra-easy setting, which pretty much just requires you to just hit a button from time to time and the game will do the rest, so while this is a decidedly hardcore game in style, it's hugely accessible to newcomers. Even if you do become a grand master of Bayonetta, working your way up through the difficulty levels, this is not a game that is going lose it's visual appeal any time soon. |
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Universe at War: Earth Assault (Xbox 360) $4.99 Did you know that December 21st in 2012 is the date that the world's set to end, according to the Mayan calendar? It could mean anything: massive sunspot activity, reversal of the Earth's magnetic field, one of those things falling from space that people make films about... or maybe an alien invasion? Well, if you're getting stuck into Universe at War: Earth Assault, you'd best run with alien invasion, because that's when the game kicks off and that's what's happening. Hailing from the studios of Petroglyph, the developer behind Star Wars: Empire at War, Universe at War: Earth Assault is a real time strategy title that pitches four factions into all out war: humans, the Hierarchy, the Masari and the Novus. In a nutshell, the Hierarchy want to conquer Earth and it leads to all kind of bad news for our little blue and green sphere. High up the list of features in Universe at War: Earth Assault is what Petroglyph calls 'Tactical Innovations'. This will allow players to retrain and customise their units even during the heat of battle. Get it right and you'll find yourself overwhelming the enemy and making the most of tactical opportunities. Universe at War also features deformable terrain, so you'll be able to lay huge cities to waste and then come back to visit the battle scars you've left on the very planet. The game comes complete with a multiplayer mode that borrows from MMOs. Players will be able to engage each other on a persistent virtual Earth, racking up achievements, rewards, and medals as they go. |
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And Still Peace Did Not Come $22.99 When bullets hit Agnes Kamara-Umunna’s home in Monrovia, Liberia, she and her father hastily piled whatever they could carry into their car and drove toward the border, along with thousands of others. An army of children was approaching, under the leadership of Charles Taylor. It seemed like the end of the world. Slowly, they made their way to the safety of Sierra Leone. They were the lucky ones. After years of exile, with the fighting seemingly over, Agnes returned to Liberia—a country now devastated by years of civil war. Families have been torn apart, villages destroyed, and it seems as though no one has been spared. Reeling, and unsure of what to do in this place so different from the home of her memories, Agnes accepted a job at the local UN-run radio station. Their mission is peace and their method is reconciliation through understanding and communication. Soon, she came up with a daring plan: Find the former child soldiers, and record their stories. And so Agnes, then a 43-year-old single mother of four, headed out to the ghettos of Monrovia and befriended them, drinking Club Beer and smoking Dunhill cigarettes with them, earning their trust. One by one, they spoke on her program, Straight from the Heart , and slowly, it seemed like reconciliation and forgiveness might be possible. From Ellen Johnson-Sirleaf, Africa’s first female president, to Butt Naked, a warlord whose horrific story is as unforgettable as his nickname—everyone has a story to tell. Victims and perpetrators. Boys and girls, mothers and fathers. Agnes comforts rape survivors, elicits testimonials from warlords, and is targeted with death threats—all live on the air. Set in a place where monkeys, not raccoons, are the scourge of homeowners; the trees have roots like elephant legs; and peacebuilding is happening from the ground-up. Harrowing, bleak, hopeful, humorous, and deeply moving— And Still Peace Did Not Come is not only Agnes’s memoir: It is also her testimony to a nation’s descent into the horrors of civil war, and its subsequent rise out of the ashes. |
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Kinect Disneyland Adventures (Xbox 360) $34.99 Ever wanted Mickey Mouse and his friends to come and play in your own home? With Disneyland Kinect Adventures that's now totally possible as The Happiest Place On Earth has been recreated for the 360. Taking Kinect gaming to the next level, players get to explore the Anaheim park in all its glory, meeting their favourite characters in a way that everyone can enjoy. Of course it's a little tricky to include rollercoasters and rides on a disc, so developer Frontier has reimagined Disneyland's famous rides into a series of minigames. Each game is themed around the ride it's named after; you could be flying over the streets of London alongside Peter Pan, rowing a boat with the Pirates of the Carribean or dancing with the Disney Princesses at the Fantasy Faire. No matter what your favourite bit of the park is, you'll find it here in Disneyland Kinect Adventures. With 35 different characters to meet as you explore the park, single player and co-op games aplenty, 18 different rides and lots of secrets to discover, Disneyland Kinect Adventures is packed out with things for younger players (and the not so young) to experience. It's like having a theme park in your living room! |
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Alan Wake French Edition for Xbox 360 $34.96 You play a best selling writer named Alan Wake who goes on vacation with his loving wife to a small town called Bright Falls to help his insomnia and depression. While on vacation your wife disappears, you go searching for her but what you find is something right out of a horror novel…your novel. The only thing is you don't remember writing it. While searching the town of Bright Falls, you are pushed to the brink of insanity as a dark presence stalks you and the town. As the pages of your book begin to come to life, you not only have to save your wife but unravel the mystery of the town. Game Features Maximum Number of Players: 1 Online Play: No Compatibility: Xbox 360 Manufacturer: Microsoft Category: Modern Action Adventure Subcategory: Thriller ESRB Rating: Teen ESRB Content Descriptors: Blood, language, use of alcohol and tobacco and violence |
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A Forgiving Life: What Did In The Dark Come To Light $17.5 A Forgiving Life: What Did In The Dark Come To Light |
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Condemned (Xbox 360) $9.99 Monolith Productions is garnering some highly enthusiastic attention at the moment. The team behind the warmly received No One Lives Forever has been in the press again recently following the release of the psychological shock shooter F.E.A.R. And the release of the Xbox 360 was just the excuse for a console foray after years of specialising in the PC end of the gaming scene. Teaming up with SEGA’s American arm they bring you Condemned: Criminal Origins. Continuing the developer’s current penchant for the darker side of things, Condemned puts you in the well-polished brogues of FBI Agent Thomas, whose chosen field is the study, pursuit and capture of serial killers. Track these death-worshipping humans like the animals they are through their preferred habitat – mazes of broken windows, crumbling brickwork and dilapidated tenements. Your long-developed skills as a detective and a range of precision forensic tools will help you, but you’ll have to rely just as much on split second reactions and brawling skills if you are to get out of your mission in one piece. Monolith made its name showing what could be done on games running through Windows, at a time when nobody believed in a DOS-less future for PC gaming. This technical expertise is brought to bear on the latest Microsoft confection, the 360, with lighting, texture mapping and filtering techniques employed that are like nothing you’ll have seen this generation. The first person viewpoint that Monolith favours is used, but this is still an adventure game where you execute melee moves on your quarries, as well as pick up and throw a variety of inanimate objects. Full compatibility with 5:1 surround sound will allow you to take advantage of your home movie set-up, and sophisticated and reactive enemy AI completes the package, making Condemned a suitable tech fest for a debut on such an able machine. You also get, as is the vogue these days, an involving plot with twists a plenty to keep you interested. If your new Xbox 360 has just joined an already impressive array of high-end entertainment technology in your front room, here’s just the thing to put your new setup through its paces. |
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Condemned Classics (Xbox 360) $4.99 Monolith Productions is garnering some highly enthusiastic attention at the moment. The team behind the warmly received No One Lives Forever has been in the press again recently following the release of the psychological shock shooter F.E.A.R. And the release of the Xbox 360 was just the excuse for a console foray after years of specialising in the PC end of the gaming scene. Teaming up with SEGA’s American arm they bring you Condemned: Criminal Origins. Continuing the developer’s current penchant for the darker side of things, Condemned puts you in the well-polished brogues of FBI Agent Thomas, whose chosen field is the study, pursuit and capture of serial killers. Track these death-worshipping humans like the animals they are through their preferred habitat – mazes of broken windows, crumbling brickwork and dilapidated tenements. Your long-developed skills as a detective and a range of precision forensic tools will help you, but you’ll have to rely just as much on split second reactions and brawling skills if you are to get out of your mission in one piece. Monolith made its name showing what could be done on games running through Windows, at a time when nobody believed in a DOS-less future for PC gaming. This technical expertise is brought to bear on the latest Microsoft confection, the 360, with lighting, texture mapping and filtering techniques employed that are like nothing you’ll have seen this generation. The first person viewpoint that Monolith favours is used, but this is still an adventure game where you execute melee moves on your quarries, as well as pick up and throw a variety of inanimate objects. Full compatibility with 5:1 surround sound will allow you to take advantage of your home movie set-up, and sophisticated and reactive enemy AI completes the package, making Condemned a suitable tech fest for a debut on such an able machine. You also get, as is the vogue these days, an involving plot with twists a plenty to keep you interested. If your new Xbox 360 has just joined an already impressive array of high-end entertainment technology in your front room, here’s just the thing to put your new setup through its paces. |
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Pre-owned: Kinect Sports - Xbox 360 Game. $29.99 Suitable for the Xbox 360.This is a pre-owned game.All pre-owned games are in full working order and of satisfactory quality.For use with Xbox 360 Kinect - requires Kinect sensor.Simple, intuitive and instantly fun, Kinect Sports delivers the ultimate party experience! Whether you are trying to outmanoeuver the goalie to win the soccer match or cheering on your friends at ringside.The first full-body, controller-free sports game, Kinect Sports is so real, you will almost feel the wind in your hair as you fly over hurdles and the sand in your toes as you set, bump and spike your way to volleyball.Become a multisport athlete. Kinect Sports features six team-based and individual sports: soccer, beach volleyball, bowling, table tennis, track and field, and boxing - with many challenges for each experience. Getting into the game is as easy as stepping in front of your TV.Take one for the team. Kinect Sports includes a variety of fun game modes for solo, cooperative and competitive play with levels to encourage and challenge players of all ages and skill sets.Sports Party mode allows you to compete against a friend, rally a whole room full of players into teams, with everyone jumping in and out to catch a breath, or bring your team to victory.Live your sports star dreams. Kinect Sports puts your avatar in the spotlight and lets you experience what it is like to be a world-famous sports star.Bask in the glow of the paparazzi fervor with your teammates after a big victory and deck out your avatar with stylish rewards for your proudest gameplay feats.For ages 12 years and over.This item is FREE delivery within 48 hours.Argos cannot be held responsible for any delay in delivery if there is a disruption to postal services out of our control. This game cannot be used as part of a hardware package. Additional game content is not part of these pre-owned games. Likewise accessories may not be included. This pre-owned game is exempt from the 30 day money back guarantee. However if faulty it is covered by a 30 day warranty period. This does not affect your statutory rights |

Xbox 360 Ultimate Repair guide!
I came across something the other night called The James Dean 3 Red Light Fix Pro, and I thought I’d see if anyone else had come across it. If you’re currently looking for an Xbox 360 repair then I’m sure you’ll be interested.
It’s a sore subject for me...
A couple of months back I fired up my Xbox 360 and saw those dreaded red lights of death. Over the next couples of days the console switched between working and not working, until eventually it stopped working altogether. So I started looking around for an Xbox 360 repair, because my warranty had expired and I didn’t like the thought of splashing out on a new one.
To cut a long story short, I didn’t find much. All the quick fixes I came across online and via friends were useless. Just type in “Xbox 360 repair” into Google and I’m sure you’ll come across the same stupid “tricks” people suggest to get your console working again. But trust me and don’t waste your time trying them.
So in the end I did what I thought I’d never do – I sent it back to Microsoft. They offer an Xbox 360 repair service, although it’s known for being costly and slow, and I can confirm that it is indeed both those things. It took 7 weeks to come back to me, and cost me over $150 with shipping. It came back working, though, so I was happy. Until...
...My friend’s Xbox 360 broke...
Like me, he was all prepared to send it back to Microsoft, but before he got around to it he carried out his own search for an Xbox 360 repair, and he found The James Dean 3 Red Light Fix Pro. He decided to give it a try.
A few days later I saw him, and his Xbox 360 was back in perfect working order.
I couldn’t believe it!
He showed me the video tutorials that accompanied The James Dean 3 Red Light Fix Pro, and he showed me how simply he’d performed his Xbox 360 repair. I should have been happy for him, but I was too mad for that. I’d wasted 2 months of my time and $150 of my money on an Xbox 360 repair, and here was someone who’d achieved the same thing for a fraction of the cost in a fraction of the time.
Since then I’ve suggested The James Dean 3 Red Light Fix Pro to another of my friends, and it worked for him too. If mine ever breaks again, I certainly won’t be sending it back to Microsoft. Not now I’ve seen how simple and quick it is to perform an Xbox 360 repair with The James Dean 3 Red Light Fix Pro.
I suggest anyone who has a dead Xbox 360 checks it out before you waste your time and money, like I did.
Visit http://xbox36orepairguide.blogspot.com To fix your xbox 360 now!
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