Monday, January 30, 2012

Global Agenda's Second Anniversary

Global Agenda, futuristic MMO/Shooter celebrates its second anniversary by providing anniversary content that introduces Switchblade Pet, PvP Tournament Reward, and Back Catalog of Flair Items

Now Global Agenda celebrates its second anniversary by providing anniversary content that introduces Switchblade Pet, PvP Tournament Reward, and Back Catalog of Flair Items. If you haven’t tried the game earlier, now you have the perfect opportunity to try it.

Global Agenda’s Second Anniversary Promotions Include:

  • Free Limited Edition Pet – Hi-Rez Studios is enticing players new and old to join in this week’s celebration of the two-year anniversary. Any player winning an instanced PvP or PvE mission between January 30th and February 6th will receive a miniature version of the Switchblade Boss as a player Pet.
  • PvP Tournament Reward – Hi-Rez is sponsoring player managed PvP tournaments including a recent 6v6 competition. As 2012 is the year of the dragon, all tournament participants receive a free dragon themed helmet in addition to an exclusive item and cash prize for the winning team.
  • More Flair – Over 100 back-catalogue appearance and flair items from days past are returning for sale within the Dome City Burning Fashion vendor.

Thursday, January 26, 2012

DICE's Hints At A 'Treat' And More Fixes to BF3 Cheats

February is expected to be a big month in terms of fixes and updates for BF3 Cheats . Daniel Matros, DICE's main Community Manager posted on Twitter yesterday that there have been developments in the office concerning Battlefield 3 hacks . Matros states that new things are in the works and that us fans, will be in for a treat. Time frame: sometime later, so no real expected date. We'll keep you covered if there are any new developments in terms of this treat for BF3 Hacks .



Also announced are more fixes, recently more and more users are getting a "Disconnected From Punkbuster" error. This current issue is being investigated, so don't expect your
Battlefield 3 hacks (PC) matches to be interrupted all that much longer.

also you can look to Aimjunkies.com for your Global Agenda hacks and Global Agenda cheats .

Global Agenda Cheats-ABOUT THE GAME

 From the ashes of the devastating Third Great War rose the Commonwealth, an oppressive world government determined to control the entire planet. The few remaining independent factions retaliate the only way they can, withelite teams of special operatives trained in advanced warfare tactics and equipped with high-tech weaponry. The future of humanity is their battleground, where knowledge is power, technology is a race, and everyone has a Global Agenda cheat
.

  • Create your agent - Create, customize, and develop multiple agent characters, complementing your FPS skills with accessible RPG-style progression. Unlock weaponry and cutting edge devices including jetpacks, grenade launchers, mines, deployable turrets, stealth suits, holographic decoys,robotic droids and HUNDREDS of others.
  • Co-Op with friends online - Four players share the same online mission experience - working as a team,communicating via built-in text and voice chat, infiltrating facilities, defeating end bosses, and earning technology upgrades.
  • Compete in fast-paced, Global Agenda cheats multiplayer matches - Teamwork and tactics are paramount within objective-based game types designed from the ground up to support intense and balanced player vs. player combat.

Wednesday, January 4, 2012

Activision Will Enhance Call of Duty Every Few Weeks

It can sometimes feel like the commercials for Activision’s Call of Duty series are always on. If the publisher has its way, the games will be too.

The Call of Duty franchise has been an enormous cash cow for publisher Activision.

It can sometimes feel like the commercials for Activision’s Call of Duty series are always on. If the publisher has its way, the games will be too.

Speaking to Wired.com via phone last month, Activision Publishing CEO Eric Hirshberg said the company looks at the popular shooter series as a persistent world for its players, one that is both constantly evolving and perpetually played.

“The idea of giving people constant incremental playable content and making it so you’re never more than a few weeks away from the next new experience within the Call of Duty universe is part of what we’re experimenting with,” Hirshberg said.

“This franchise doesn’t really behave like most franchises,” he said. “It’s become something of a year-round activity for a large percentage of our player population.”

 

Activision released Call of Duty: Modern Warfare 3, the series’ eighth installment, last November for Xbox 360, PlayStation 3, Wii and PC. The game moved 6.5 million copies in the U.S. and U.K. during its first 24 hours, setting a brand new day-one sales record and earning the company $400 million. In December,Modern Warfare 3 hit the $1 billion mark.

The Activision chief said that to continue achieving this kind of massive financial success, the company has to listen closely to the desires of its fans. What they want, he said, is more downloadable content. Though 2010′s Call of Duty: Black Ops was followed by the release of several new multiplayer map packs, Hirshberg says that its players are looking for more.

“One of the things that was most appealing when we were researching these ideas with consumers is the idea of breaking up the DLC so that it comes more often and more regularly,” Hirshberg said. “We want to provide DLC to people more often and also experiment with more of a variety in the forms of playable content.”

The publisher might release missions or spec-op modes instead of just multiplayer maps, Hirshberg said.

A large chunk of Activision’s “always on” strategy for Call of Duty is riding on Elite, a hybrid social-networking and stat-tracking service that Activision released alongside Modern Warfare 3 last year. Despite some early technical hiccups, the service has been a rousing success, garnering over a million premium subscribers during its first week online.

Premium members pay a $50 yearly subscription fee to get free access to all of the game’s downloadable content in addition to a host of features and strategy guides.

Though it’s tough to predict how Elite will evolve over the next few years, Hirshberg says the company’s strategy is to communicate with fans as much as possible, using social networking tools like Twitter and online message boards to accumulate data on what Call of Duty players want and tweak the nascent service accordingly.

“The nature of this kind of service requires constant iteration,” Hirshberg said. “There are things [in development] that consumers don’t yet know they want… because they can’t imagine it,” he said.