A company in Toronto named FanFit Gaming is creating hand bent lights that is video game inspired.Their hand bent lights celebrate games like Overwatch coming in a total of 9 neon light colors.The merchandise is clearly for people who more than just enjoy the game and would spend enough to buy merchandise to put it in their household. FanfitGaming says,We strive to capture the love for some of our favorite gaming moments and experiences through our products.” Green is a solo entrepreneur that started the company in October and then opened it up for business on February 1. He has been making gear based on games such as Overwatch and Dota 2. Green has also made pennants, keychains, and character-based toys.
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Overkill Software has announced that Payday 3 is the making but the process of making it will take as long as they need to take Said Starbreeze Studios a Parent Company of Overkill Software. Starbreeze has not set an official release date for Payday 3 so the team creating the game will be able to take their time.
“It is with great satisfaction that we also can announce that Payday 3 production is officially initiated and at a full design stage,” said Starbreeze CEO Bo Andersson Klint." Payday fans might be a little dissapointed because it's been so long since the last release of A Payday game which was "Payday 2" in August 13,2013. (If anymore information on the topic comes up,it will be updated here.) Author:John swaynezMy names John and uhh "KNOWLEDGE" "Credit given to Gamespot.com For This List"
Top 10 Games Of Januwary 2017
January 2017 Top 10 For PS4 Games
Activision has announced its best-selling first-person shooter will return to its roots with its 2017 installment. This should not come as an enormous surprise to fans of first-person shooters, but Activision is taking the Call of Duty series back to “its roots”. In a conference call to investors on Thursday, the publisher’s chief executive, Eric Hirshberg, and chief operating officer, Thomas Tippl, both acknowledged that last year’s space-based Call of Duty: Infinite Warfare had commercially underperformed. They promised that the 2017 instalment would return to “traditional combat” – a homely phrase which is likely to mean either a contemporary or historical setting.
The announcement reverses a trend toward ever more futuristic combat, which really began with the 2012 title Call of Duty: Black Ops II,partly based in a second cold war in the mid-2020s. Later, the poorly received Call of Duty: Ghosts, and the decent pair Call of Duty: Advanced Warfare and Call of Duty: Infinite Warfare, wandered further into a speculative universe of drone warfare, mass electronic disruption and outer space dog fights. This trend was always questioned by hardcore fans of the series – which began in 2003 as a second world war drama – and was only going to become more obscure as studios faced coming up with ever more outlandish technological weaponry. Continuing along this narrative route for a few years we faced the prospect of holographic soldiers shooting each other with mind lasers – or even worse, a diplomatic solution. Of course, the decision to return to the franchise’s roots won’t be a direct response to the lower than expected sales of Infinite Warfare (down almost 50% on 2015’s Black Ops III). Each title in the series now has a three-year development period, so this year’s team, San Francisco-based studio Sledgehammer, will have been well into development by the time fans started expressing contempt for Infinite Warfare’s setting. However, it’s likely Activision will have had an inkling they were losing fans after Ghosts, and when EA announced its first world war based Battlefield 1 to a frenziedly positive reception, that must have been the final nail in the space-age coffin lid. So where is the series going? The first Call of Duty title that Sledgehammer worked on was Modern Warfare 3, which had a near-future setting in line with the rest of the Modern Warfare titles. However, Tippl’s wording was, “In 2017, Activision will take Call of Duty back to its roots and traditional combat will once again take centre stage” – and the roots of Call of Duty are in the Second World War. This is where the first three titles were set, as well as Treyarch’s Modern Warfare follow-up, World at War. The success of Battlefield 1, which is estimated to have sold around 15m copies, may well point toward the 20th century. Also interesting from the conference call is the fact that 2015’s Black Ops III is still performing well, especially in terms of digital microtransactions: Activision made $3.8bn (£3.05bn) from in-game purchases of items and weapons last year. Whatever era the next Call of Duty is set in, we can certainly expect more use of this controversial revenue stream. This is one 21st-century innovation that isn’t going anywhere.
Damn youtube its broke again...
How many times youtube was broke this month ? this year? hmm ... ​ The most subscribed Youtuber names Pewdiepie did a livestream on Wednesday freaking out about the glitch He earns about $7-12 million per year of his subscribers and views, which are dropping drastically because "every unsub counts as -100 for PewDiePie. YouTube really needs to fix this glitch fast and find a way to stop this problem and change back the subscriber count back to normal.Thousands of Youtubers have been complaining to YouTube for months about mysterious drops in subscriber counts, but the company has long insisted nothing was wrong which sounds like a big scam,who really knows what goes on at the Youtube Office. According to YouTube, the glitch started on Monday and they are working to fix it. ​ ​ |