Left 4 Dead Game Review

Rescue is here - after a long, bloody battle with countless zombies, you and three fellow survivors have made it to the rooftop of a ravaged hospital, where a helicopter lands to evacuate you to safety. In a blaze of gunfire and guts, you and two of your companions fight your way to the helipad and climb aboard the chopper, but the fourth member of your team is wounded and limping behind you. At the last second, a snake-like tongue shoots out from the darkness, wraps around him, and drags him kicking and screaming back into the grasp of the horde. You have a choice to make: do you leave the chopper, endangering the lives of the rest of the team, to attempt a rescue? Or do you cut your losses, tell yourself you couldn’t have saved him, and try to ignore the horrible sounds of a swarm of flesh-hungry zombies tearing him limb from limb? The essence of gaming has often been described as “a series of interesting choices,” and this is easily one of the single most interesting choices I’ve ever faced.

Left 4 Dead is based on the same plot as those of nearly every zombie horror film ever made: as one of four survivors of a devastating zombie apocalypse, you must get from point A to point B in one piece in order to escape, but between you and your goal is an army of hungry zombies. L4D pays homage to its inspirational source material with movie poster-style loading screens and end-of-round stats that roll like credits. The four campaigns each average a little over an hour in length; they’re designed primarily to be played in co-op mode with three other players over Xbox Live, but you can play them all in single-player mode along
Each campaign begins with the four survivors in a “safe room” stocked with weapons, ammunition, and medical supplies, and equipped with a reinforced zombie-proof door (and a barred window that a zombie arm can reach through, groping around for a victim). The moment you unlock the door and step into zombie-infested territory is a good time to unlearn everything you know about playing squad-based shooters, because in L4D, to lose sight of your teammates is to invite doom.

The battle for survival is fast, bloody, and terrifying in a way so few “horror” games are. Swift-moving 28 Days Later-style zombies charge at you from everywhere and anywhere, attempting to grab a chunk of meat. L4D’s “Director” AI is remarkably effective at keeping you on your toes by spawning zombies in different, unexpected spots, giving you only a few moments to regroup between waves. The effect is seamless; while you will often be attacked by zombies coming from an area you’ve already swept clean, which makes no logical sense if you stop to think about it, there is little time for reality checks, and you’ll be too busy enjoying blasting zombie heads off to care, anyway.
Maybe it’s because there haven’t been many good co-op-focused games up to this point, but this is the first time I have felt that I truly needed to act as part of the group in order to succeed. In most other team-based games (Counter-Strike being a notable exception), a “team” is a loose association of players who can run off and do their own thing if they want, and if they get killed, they just respawn and repeat. In L4D, respawning isn’t a right, it’s a privilege - get taken out and your teammates will have to find another survivor locked up in a closet (you, placed by the Director), or else you’re stuck in spectator mode until they reach the next safe room. Survivors are quite durable, though, and can be helped back up by a teammate even when their health is knocked down to zero a few times, so you don’t spend too much time in the penalty box.

Need for Speed Undercover Cheat Codes

Achievements

Here are ALL 50 of the achievements and what needs to be done to get them. They are worth a total of 1,000 points.

Apprentice Mechanic (5)
Customize a car in Career mode.

Cat And Mouse Virus (5)
Infected with the Cops and Robbers virus by another player in a Cops and Robbers event.

Get Out Of The Way! (5)
Avoid 5 Road Blocks in a Pursuit and successfully evade in Career mode.

Keys To The City (5)
Unlock Port Crescent in Career mode.

Learner’s Permit (5)
Acquire your first car in Career mode.

Aficionado (10)
Purchase or win any 5 cars for your garage.

Branching Out (10)
Unlock Sunset Hills in Career mode.

Crossing The Line (10)
Win a Ranked Multiplayer Cops and Robbers event.

First! (10)
Won a Multiplayer Ranked Game.

Lose The Fuzz (10)
Successfully complete 5 Pursuits.

Meet Carmen (10)
Face off against Carmen in ‘The Game’.

Meet Hector (10)
Face off against Hector in ‘Versus’.

Meet Nickel (10)
Face off against Nickel in ‘Road Rage’.

Meet Rose (10)
Face off against Rose in ‘Rollercoaster’.

Meet Zack 10
Face off against Zack in ‘Rush Hour’.

Path Of Destruction (10)
Disable 10 Police Cars in a Pursuit and successfully evade in Career mode.

Spiked Punch (10)
Avoid a spike strip in a Pursuit and successfully evade in Career mode.

Unstoppable Force (10)
Avoid 50 Road Blocks in Career mode.

Bay Drive & Harbor (15)
Dominate the Bay Drive & Harbor event.

Community Member (15)
Create or use an existing account to sign into ‘EA Nation’.

East Fasulo Bridge (15)
Dominate the East Fasulo Bridge event

East I-5 (15)
Dominate the East I-5 event

First of Many (15)
Win a Ranked Multiplayer event against 7 human players

Gold Coast To Ocean (15)
Dominate the Gold Coast to Ocean event

Love Thy Tires (15)
Avoid 12 Spike Strips total in Career pursuits.

North River Expressway (15)
Dominate the North River Expressway event.

Pine Creek & Douglas (15)
Dominate the Pine Creek & Douglas event.

South Canyon Hwy (15)
Dominate the South Canyon Hwy event.

Tri-City Run (15)
Dominate the Tri-City Run event.

5 Finger Discount (20)
Complete ALL Hot Car Missions.

Active Community Member (20)
Participate in any Community Day (Visit NeedforSpeed.com for more info).

Chase Or Be Chased (20)
Win ALL the Highway Battles in Career mode.

Hired Goons (20)
Takeout ALL the ‘Goons’ in Career mode.

Nothing Stock (20)
Discovered ALL 3 Tuning Shops in Career mode.

Wasting Tax Dollars (20)
Get $100,000 Cost to State in a single pursuit and evade

Window Shopper (20)
Discovered ALL 3 Pro Shops in Career mode.

2 Birds, 1 Stone (25)
Complete the mission ‘Double Trouble’.

Among The Best (25)
Won 25 Ranked Multiplayer events

Bowling With Hector (25)
Complete the Hector sequence in the mission ‘Kingpin’.

Freeze! Hold It Right There! (25)
Take a Photo and upload it to NeedforSpeed.com

Lose The Eye In The Sky (25)
Escape from a helicopter in a successfully completed pursuit. (Must be Career mode level 8 or higher)

Nickel And Dimes (25)
Complete the Nickel sequence in mission ‘Payback’.

Own The Road (25)
Dominate 25 events in Career mode.

Scrapheap (25)
Disable 100 Police vehicles.

To Protect And Serve (25)
Complete the Carmen sequence in the mission ‘Rematch’.

Zack Trap (25)
Complete the Zack sequence in ‘The Trap’ mission.

Retired (40)
Finish the Career Story.

Notorious (50)
Finish 119 Multiplayer races in any position.

Most Wanted (100)
Successfully complete 50 Pursuits.

Completionist (100)
Complete ALL events in Career mode.

Need for Speed Undercover Review

It’s easy to forget how long the Need for Speed series has been around. The original – our first taste of driving licensed exotica from the likes of Ferrari, Lamborghini and Dodge – existed in a world before Gran Turismo, at least five years before Midnight Club and when we were still playing the very first Ridge Racer. Over a dozen games and years later, it’s an achievement that EA Black Box (developers for the majority of the series) have managed to keep the desire to move around in a car quickly so stoked for so long.

Of course, it hasn’t been an easy life. The Underground years may have been hugely successful but now look tacky and unfashionable and as for ProStreet, well… EA’s attempts to keep up with the trends in modified car culture resulted in a disappointing change of direction that was as much fun as the driving laps of a car park. So, it seems obvious that the latest game should carry on where some of the best in the series – namely, Hot Pursuit 2 and Most Wanted – left off. However, unlike the previously mentioned games, NFS Undercover is different because you will get the opportunity to work for both sides of the law. As Maggie Q and Christinia Milian will inform you during the movie-style cutscenes, your position as a ‘wheelman’ requires you to infiltrate a car smuggling ring by convincing the bad guys you’re one of them.

In gameplay terms, this mean you’ll be taking part in the usual point-to-point and circuit battles to improve your status amongst the local street racers, as well as outrunning cops in ‘damage to the state’ missions. Your criminal activities will also include ‘theft and delivery’ jobs, where you’ll get the opportunity to sample some of the higher tiered cars early on. So far, so Most Wanted. However, as you’re really a cop, the tables will turn. Much like Burnout – and with a bit of a nod to old classic Chase HQ – you’ll be instructed to take down key members of the crime syndicate by literally smashing their cars to pieces.

That’s not to say that ProStreet has been completely overlooked; both the handling and damage model have evolved from it. So, some of the arcade powerslides of old have been replaced with a slightly more simulation approach with tangible understeer and oversteer noticeable in each of the cars. For the most part, Undercover is a successful return to form. But it feels like EA Black Box have taken away more than they have added. Okay, so the Hollywood cast and FMV sections give this NFS some real narrative substance and the action movie pace is maintained thanks to your ability to ‘quick jump’ to the nearest event on the map.

But it’s behind the wheel where it counts the most and the new grown up approach lacks some of the arcade lunacy that made Hot Pursuit 2 so enjoyable. Even the modifying sections (once a huge part of Need for Speed titles) have been reduced down to little more than a handful of tuning and styling options. And anyway, if it’s over-the-top motoring madness that you’re looking for, then you’ll find that Midnight Club: LA fulfills that need. Need for Speed Undercover, then, is attempting to look back while also moving forward. Black Box has taken little in the way of risks but it’s not faultless – the streets can feel quite empty (depending on race type) and the framerate can get a bit juddery.

Ben 10: Alien Force Cheat Codes

At the ‘Bonus Content’ menu select the ‘Enter Code’ option and input the following codes at the ‘Secret Cheat’ screen to activate the corresponding effect in the game.

Unlock ALL Combos:
Enter Swampfire, Gwen, Kevin, Ben.

Invincibility:
Enter Kevin, Big Chill, Swampfire, Kevin.

Unlock Level Lord:
Enter Gwen, Kevin, Big Chill, Gwen.

Unlock Infinite Aliens:
Enter Ben, Swampfire, Gwen, Big Chill.

Unlock Goop:
Enter Ben, Swampfire, Kevin, Big chill.