Doctor Who Tumbling TARDIS Tower Game is TARDIS Jenga

Lots of people love Jenga. You know, that game with the wood blocks, where you have to remove blocks and not let the tower collapse. Well, now there is even more reason to love the game as there’s nowa Doctor Who inspired version called the Tumbling TARDIS Tower Game.

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In the game, the wood pieces are all TARDIS’ and you play it the same way, except that its all timey-wimey and stuff. Don’t let the Doctor down and let his tower fall.

This will be a lot of fun for Doctor Who fans to play and it is only $29.99(USD) from Entertainment Earth. It will be available in January, but you can pre-order it now. Better yet, you can get in your TARDIS, transport into the future by a month, and pick one up now.

[via GeekAlerts]

Microsoft’s Project Spark enters public beta on Windows 8.1

Project Spark was announced for the Xbox One back in June. The game is described as being one that offers “an endless adventure where everything is customizable.” Project Spark will allow users to play what other creators have built and also build for others. Basically, the users are the creators and the players. And there […]

Anchorman 2: Scotchy Scotch Toss Mobile Game Keeps It Classy

Paramount Digital Entertainment has launched the classiest mobile game ever conceived. The game is called Anchorman 2: Scotchy Scotch Toss and it’s the “greatest app n the history of western civilization.” The point of the game is to toss ice cubes into Ron’s glass of scotch.

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The game has over 300 one-liners recorded by Will Ferrell as Ron Burgundy. You can play against the computer (Ron) or play against friends. The game has four locations that are from the new film, including Ron’s RV, the Channel 4 News desk, Tino’s Jazz Bar and Ron’s apartment.

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The game is available for iOS users for 99 cents on the App Store, and an Android version is coming soon.

“This game combines my two favorite things, scotch and playful exchanges with total strangers,” said Ron Burgundy.

MLB releases Franchise MVP for Android, lets you live your baseball fantasies

The World Series is over, and it’s a long three months before Spring Training begins. What’s a baseball fan to do until then? Well, if you’re an Android user, you could pick up Franchise MVP, a new game released by none other than Major League Baseball. MLB’s no stranger to apps, of course, with its popular At Bat programs for iOS and Android, but mobile gaming is relatively new territory. Franchise MVP isn’t like MLB 2K13 though; instead of creating a team, you follow an individual player through his career in the majors. You can play any position on the field and for any MLB team, building skills like batting, pitching and fielding along the way and making key in-field decisions. The game is free to download, but if you want to hurry things along, you can choose to spend real money for in-game currency. So if your favorite team missed out on taking home the Commissioner’s Trophy this year, you can at least console yourself by using Franchise MVP to become the baseball player of your dreams.

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Via: Droid Life

Source: Google Play

3D Clue Game adds a new dimension to a regular boardgame

3d-clue-gameHave you ever given the iconic detective game Clue a go in the past? If you have answered in the affirmative, but have not “revisited” it since, perhaps it is time to check it out all over again. Who knows, it might just rekindle your love for boardgames, don’t you think so? Except that since we are now well into the 21st century, having experienced a slew of different technological advancements even in the field of board games, why not bring some of these over to the $249.95 3D Clue Game? This is what Hammacher has done, where all nine rooms of the mortiferous mansion have somewhat sunken in a stately wooden cabinet.

It does not matter if you think that Professor Plum is the one who has committed the dastardly crime in the conservatory, or whether it is Colonel Mustard who stopped his victim’s clock in the billiard room, all players will move their pieces across the tempered glass playing surface, where you are also treated to a view down into the chambers where the crime could very well have happened. Apart from that, each room would feature gold-painted resin furniture, including the table and chairs in the dining room all the way to the butcher block in the kitchen. The lead pipe, candlestick and other suspect weaponry have been made out of metal, where they are then tucked into a faux leather storage case alongside other game essentials such as the cards, player notepads, dice, and die-cast metal, wood-topped playing pieces.
[ 3D Clue Game adds a new dimension to a regular boardgame copyright by Coolest Gadgets ]

Google’s Doctor Who Platform Game Doodle: A Perfect Friday Time Sink

Google's Doctor Who Platform Game Doodle: A Perfect Friday Time Sink

This weekend is the 50th anniversary of Doctor Who’s first appearance on the small screen, and Google has chosen to celebrate it with a wonderful multi-level platform game.

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Hands-on with Dustcloud, a game that lets you virtually shoot your friends… for a price

It’s Monday morning at your local coffee shop, and you pause over your vanilla latte to ponder another customer. That face, you think to yourself, I know it. Whipping out your smartphone you check a social networking app, and it’s as you suspected: he’s an opponent. He needs to be dusted.

That’s not a dime-novel thriller setup, it’s Dustcloud — a Zibgbee-powered Urban Warfare game. Using discreet smartphone connected “duster” guns, an online player database and monetized virtual ammunition, Dustcloud proposes turning your everyday world into a Internet of Things battleground.

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Source: Dustcloud (1), (2)

PlayStation 4′s Killzone: Shadow Fall Was Originally 290GB of Data

There are many areas around the US that have speedy broadband Internet service, but some of us still labor behind incredibly slow connections that take forever to download large files.

With the impending launch of the PS4, the premier launch title Killzone: Shadow Fall is getting a lot of press. Incredibly, the original size of the game files before compression was used was a whopping 290 GB according to details recently published. Considering the game has always been intended to be offered as a digital download, I can only imagine how long that download would take at my house.

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Shadow Fall was eventually compressed down to 40 GB to enable it to fit on a Blu-ray disc. That said, 40GB is still a massive download for people who opt to purchase digitally. One reason the game was so large was because all of the textures are incredibly high resolution. The game also reportedly has a very large surface area around 5 to 10 times larger than Killzone 3 offered.

“I think at some point the disc image that we were generating was around 180 gigs,” said Guerrilla Games’ technical director Michiel van der Leeuw. “And if we would have put all the levels in, which we didn’t, because then the disc image generator broke, it would have been around 290 gigs of data.”

The good news for people hoping to purchase the game in digital format is that the PlayStation 4 will have the PlayGo system that allows you to download only a portion of the game before you can play. The bad news is that portion is still 7.5 GB meaning many people will wait many hours just to download the first portion of the game. Probably better to just buy the game on disc, if you ask me.

[via Forbes]

Real-Life Architectural Puzzles Made for Escaping

Real-Life Architectural Puzzles Made for Escaping

You’re alone in a room, or perhaps with a small group of friends, looking for a way out, searching all the walls and surfaces around you—even the furniture and objects—for clues. There is no apparent way out. There are no immediately visible doors.

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Microsoft: stand the Xbox One any way you like, as long as it’s flat

Xbox One isn't made for standing up, prefers to game lying down

We’re still a couple of months away from the launch of the Xbox One, but if you’ve already cleared out a welcoming cubbyhole in anticipation, then we hope you’ve pictured the next-gen console lying down. Speaking with GameSpot at the Tokyo Game Show, top Xbox bod Albert Panello said the One doesn’t “support vertical orientation,” or: you shouldn’t stand it up. Panello explains the console’s slot-loading drive simply wasn’t designed for operating in that position, and if you’re a rebellious type that laughs at the threat of busted hardware, you’ll be ignoring official advice “at your own risk.”

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Source: GameSpot