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Breaking the Illusion: Not Playing by the Rules
by Chris Pereira
21 May 2012 at 7:07pm

I like to play games in what I imagine is an unusual manner, or at least I thought this to be the case until 1UP members revealed they share some of my habits. One of these things, my propensity for systematically exploring an area before moving on, has reared its head in particularly noticeable fashion as I make my way through Max Payne 3. Playing in this way was clearly something the game's designers accounted for, as evidenced by the collectables scattered throughout, and yet it feels almost as if I'm being punished for deciding to be a completionist.

My process for approaching each area in Max Payne 3 follows the same pattern, only being altered if I'm low on health and out of painkillers (health packs in Max Payne's world). I kill everyone and then proceed to sweep over the entire room, seeking out any hidden spots or areas which do not appear to lead to the next area. As I make my way from one combat area to the next, I'm mindful of my surroundings and am sure to double back to check behind staircases and to see which doors can be opened. I do this all while searching for golden gun components, painkillers, and clues which can be examined. The latter can fill in the backstory but is hardly needed to get the gist of the narrative. I'm able to comfortably do this because there is no ticking clock, even if what Max is doing at any given time suggests there should be, and because enemies come in limited numbers and only in certain areas.



What If?: Gaming's Alternate Realities
by 1UP Staff
21 May 2012 at 6:27pm

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1UP COVER STORY

1UP COVER STORY | WEEK OF MAY 21 | WHAT IF?

What If?: Gaming's Alternate Realities 1UP explores what might have happened had video game history gone differently.

People love to look back at the past and ask, "What if things had gone differently?" Navel-gazing at history spans cultures and races. Whether it's author Harry Turtledove making a fortune by contemplating how differently the American Civil War would have gone if someone had time-traveled to give the Confederate Army machine guns, or the manga Konpeki No Kantai in which the Japanese navy beats up America in World War II before teaming up to kill Hitler, second-guessing ourselves seems to be human nature.

Maybe it's the competitive nature of the medium, but video gamers seem especially fond of revisiting the past and wondering about alternate outcomes. As the Three Fates in the image above suggest, games have woven a rich and complex tapestry in their mere half-century of existence -- a tapestry whose design and nature could have changed radically had things turned out differently.



What If Video Games Never Came Home?
by 1UP Staff
21 May 2012 at 6:25pm

1UP COVER STORY

1UP COVER STORY | WEEK OF MAY 21 | WHAT IF?

What if Video Games Never Came Home? Cover Story: A chilling glimpse into a world where the arcade still rules supreme.

1

UP's cover story this week revolves around the question, "What if?" In keeping with that theme, we'd like to offer this glimpse into one of many alternate realities of video gaming: A world where video games never came home. A world where the arcade still dominates gaming. How would a site like 1UP be different in such a place? We talk to our mirror universe counterparts about the state of gaming and their thoughts on the medium.




What If Third-Party Development Didn't Exist?
by Nadia Oxford
21 May 2012 at 6:24pm

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1UP COVER STORY

1UP COVER STORY | WEEK OF MAY 21 | WHAT IF?

What If Third-Party Development Didn't Exist? Cover Story: How Activision's 1982 win in court changed the industry.

L

et's be honest, when we think about Activision-Blizzard as a company, at least a few of us get a mental image of a dark overlord with hooked fingers looming over a burning landscape. This image is usually accompanied by a deep-voiced demand for sacrificial virgins. Given Activision-Blizzard's status as The Biggest Thing That Has Ever Existed in Gaming, it's easy to forget that prehistoric Activision fought for the right to develop third-party games on the Atari 2600 -- a battle that it eventually won in court.

Activision's victory essentially made it possible for third-party game designers to ply their trade on home game consoles.

Activision's drive for justice wasn't exclusively about being paid its deserved royalties, either. During the 2600 era, Atari had a nasty habit of not crediting its game developers (or even letting developers bring attention to themselves, which convinced Adventure developer Warren Robinett to bury his name in the game, possibly creating the first digital Easter Egg). When Activision won the right to make its own games for the 2600 in 1982, credit was no longer a problem.



What If Square Never Left Nintendo?
by 1UP Staff
21 May 2012 at 6:22pm

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1UP COVER STORY

1UP COVER STORY | WEEK OF MAY 21 | WHAT IF?

What If Square Never Left Nintendo? Cover Story: We look at how the RPG powerhouse would've fared without the PlayStation.

F

or RPG fans of the early 1990s, Square practically had their own branch on the Nintendo family tree. This held especially true on the Super NES, where Square came into its own with Final Fantasy IV and VI, Secret of Mana, Chrono Trigger, and wealth of Japan-only releases that loomed just out of reach for Americans. By the end of 1995, the union seemed solid. Nintendo's long-awaited Nintendo 64 system was on its way, and would be home to Square's next Final Fantasy.

There seemed no reason to worry until the spring of 1996, when those same RPG fans opened game magazines and learned that Final Fantasy VII wouldn't release in the form of a Nintendo 64 cartridge. It was now headed for the Sony PlayStation, as with every other game Square planned to make for the latest generation of consoles. By the end of the year, Square sewed up a publishing agreement with Sony, and their first PlayStation release, the fighter Tobal No. 1, sat on store shelves. It came as quite a surprise to players who'd effectively grown up with RPGs on Nintendo systems.

Final Fantasy VII didn't just amount to a critical PlayStation success; it was also instrumental in establishing the Japanese RPG in North America's mainstream game industry.



What If Steam Hadn't Recovered From Its Shaky Launch?
by 1UP Staff
21 May 2012 at 6:21pm

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1UP COVER STORY

1UP COVER STORY | WEEK OF MAY 21 | WHAT IF?

What If Steam Hadn't Recovered From Its Shaky Launch? Cover Story: Without Steam in a central role, the last decade of PC gaming would have been remarkably different.

W

hen Steam first appeared in 2002, its success was far from a sure thing. Bugs and network problems outnumbered the available games on Valve's digital distribution platform by a wide margin. Users who disliked having to launch an extra application before playing their games doubted the necessity of the program itself. It took years for Steam's library to grow, for Valve to smooth over the rough spots, and for the public to embrace the concept of digital distribution. Today, Steam is synonymous with PC gaming, putting Valve in a unique position from which they can influence the industry in a number of ways.

What if the initial stumble had resulted in a full-on faceplant? How far would the ripples of that failure have spread? I don't claim to know exactly how things would have played out differently, but a lifetime of regret and PC gaming -- which occasionally go hand in hand -- has sharpened my hindsight enough to make a few educated guesses.



What If Star Wars Had Been a Flop in 1977?
by Kat Bailey
21 May 2012 at 6:19pm

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1UP COVER STORY

1UP COVER STORY | WEEK OF MAY 21 | WHAT IF?

What If Star Wars Had Been a Flop in 1977? Cover Story: How the gaming galaxy would've been different without a few good Jedi.

I

magine that Star Wars had been a flop at the box office. Maybe George Lucas was allowed to release his original edit, or maybe word just never got out. Regardless, while it's not a disaster on par with Heaven's Gate--which brought down a whole studio--it's still pretty bad. It might survive as a cult film, and possibly even merit a reboot, but its influence is gone.

Now imagine the failure of Star Wars as one gigantic shock wave running through the video game industry. Genres, studios, even basics concepts vanish as it goes along. Now you see that, while the industry would (obviously) still exist without Star Wars, it would be very different indeed.



Mario Vs. King Kong Review: Universal Nintendo's Downward Spiral Continues
by Jeremy Parish
21 May 2012 at 6:18pm

1UP COVER STORY

1UP COVER STORY | WEEK OF MAY 21 | WHAT IF?

Mario Vs. King Kong Review: Universal Nintendo's Downward Spiral Continues Cover Story: What if Nintendo had lost the King Kong lawsuit? A review from another reality.

I

don't know if you're old enough to remember Donkey Kong, but I am. You don't really hear much about DK these days. He's been all but expunged from the annals of game history, and the tiny handful of arcade cabinets and Coleco carts that weren't destroyed back in the '80s remain a rare commodity traded among truly dedicated game collectors (quietly and in private forums, since eBay and other online auction houses instantly cancel all DK-related transactions at Universal's behest).

I miss DK. Maybe it's just nostalgia talking, but I always felt his games -- regardless of how derivative or illegal the character himself may have been -- demonstrated a lot more creativity than the King Kong games we've seen ever since the lawsuit that outlawed him. Any student of video game history knows the story there, of course: It was one of the landmark events that helped shape the industry's early days. A plucky little Japanese company called Nintendo created a fun platform-climbing game starring a carpenter named Mario as he attempted to rescue his love Pauline from the clutches of an ape called Donkey Kong. Not a very subtle reference, but that's homage for you. Universal Studios didn't share that gee-whiz sentiment, though, and they brought the full freight-train force of the Hollywood legal system to bear on Nintendo, claiming infringement on the King Kong trademark. The tiny game company never stood a chance.



Can Aliens: Colonial Marines Free Itself from Prometheus' Shadow?
by Nick Todd
21 May 2012 at 5:05pm

With the runaway success of 2009's Borderlands, Dallas-based developer Gearbox created a reputation for itself as more than just the studio behind a few Half-Life expansions or WW2 shooters, but one capable of offering its own serious creative output. With the long-in-development Aliens: Colonial Marines finally set for release early next year, Gearbox's latest trailer is capitalizing on the film franchise's return to theaters with next month's prequel-in-all-but-name, Prometheus.



Your Retro Reference Guide to Community's "Digital Estate Planning"
by 1UP Staff
18 May 2012 at 7:57pm

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By: Bob Mackey and Marty Sliva May 18, 2012

Community creator Dan Harmon isn't a stranger to video games; he's been public about his love for the medium, so it wasn't surprising to see the first episode of last night's season finale hat trick devote itself completely to old-school gaming references. What would have been a throwaway gag in any other sitcom took over most of "Digital Estate Planning's" 22 minutes, as Jeff, Britta, Pierce, Shirley, Abed, Annie, and Troy found themselves participating in a multiplayer platformer in an attempt to wrest the Hawthorne Wipes fortune from the grasp of a bastard child. This episode overflowed with visual gags devoted to the blocky roots of gaming culture, most of which flew by at a blink-and-you'll-miss-it pace; but, thankfully, your friends at 1UP are here to comb over this chunk of comedy gold to dig out the purest pieces of retro gaming nostalgia. Read on, and be sure to let us know if any references slipped past our intricate knowledge of gaming's past.


"Digital Estate Planning's" title sequence doesn't seem to point to any specific title; it's more of a pastiche of retro games that gave the player a brief preview of all the playable characters and their awesome abilities. Though Gilbert's fake game offers a resolution and color depth the NES could only dream of, the opening credits feel a lot like the intro to the NES version of Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles.





Everlast Punching Bag Parts

New Year's Resolutions For 2011 For Your Average Married Fellow

At the beginning of every year, I always say this year is going to be the year of Gabe, and every year, I've monumentally failed. Having just turned 33, I was supposed to be super rich and famous by now, instead, I've mostly settled for just smart, handsome, and funny. I also thought I would have a supermodel wife by now, who would cater to my every need, and in return, I would make her laugh, and disappoint her on a nightly basis(at least one of us would be having a good time, I can live with that). However, I do have a beautiful wife I've been married to for five and a half years now, and have a great little girl who just turned 20 months old. Normally, I post my new year's resolution on my Facebook profile, but this year Yahoo! wanted someone to share their New Year's resolutions with the world, and being that I am an attention whore, I couldn't pass this opportunity up, so here goes nothing.

My first resolution for 2011 is to make an anti-nagging machine for my wife. I love my wife very much, but some days she can nag me more than a hungry dog staring at a bag of Beggin' Strips. I would say I'd like to make my wife a custom muzzle, but that's probably just as cruel as using duct tape, and eventually she'd probably gnaw her way through it, and be extra angry for giving her duct tape breath. My main goal is to teach my wife to find a better way to deal with stress, and subsequently, not take things out on me, as even though it's my job as her husband to be her punching bag, some days I don't like having an Everlast tattoo on my forehead. Either that, or I'll learn how to better nag her, as a successful marriage is learning how to properly annoy one another just enough that going on the Marriage Ref shows how much you do truly love each other (possible side resolution there).

My second resolution is to win another eating contest this year. Now I'm no Joey Chestnut or Takeru Kobayashi, but every time I walk into a room of about 100 people, I am either the best, or second best eater in that room(if this isn't something to hang your hat on, I don't know what is, almost as impressive as a man being in a room with the best 70's pornstache and instantly getting the nickname Holmes). After having competed in hot dog and hamburger eating contests in previous years, last year, I broke through and won a pizza eating contest at a Wilmington Blue Rocks game. This was one of my proudest moments, as before with the hot dog and hamburger contests, I had never finished better than second place(the only thing second place usually gives you is indigestion, and a case of the meat sweats), but actually winning and getting all of the glory felt right, and I wouldn't mind getting it again(I told you, I am an attention whore, and I need people to realize I smell of awesome). Short of getting $10 for getting second prize at a beauty contest in a game of Monopoly, I have never really done well in contests, as I just don't have that much skill. Sure I can juggle, but outside of that, my only discernible skill is that I'm good at MS Excel (well, that and diarrhea poems, but most people above 13 don't count that as an actual skill, although I have come up with some real classics).

My third resolution is to brainwash my daughter even more this year to become as big of a Philadelphia sports fan as her Daddy. A good parent should be able to properly brainwash their children into liking the same sports teams as them, and I am Philly born and bred. So before anyone gets on my case for liking Philadelphia, I like the HOME team (I just happen to live in the Philly area) as I am supposed to, this is how sports work. So for all of the fraud Dallas Cowboys fans who live in New Jersey or California, if you aren't from Dallas or currently living in that Texas area, your favorite team should be the local team, plain and simple. Before you start your ridiculous argument, let me give you mine. Let's say everyone in San Diego were Cowboy fans, and no one liked the Chargers(with Norv Turner I can understand that, but still). Well, if no one likes the home team, and only went to games when the Cowboys were playing them, San Diego would not have a team. Again, this is how sports work: if you don't support the team, you won't have a team, and this is what I am trying to teach my daughter. I am mostly trying to have someone to watch my Eagles with me on Sundays, and since I didn't have a son(which I was hoping for, but like a little person at Six Flags trying to get on a good roller coaster, I came up a little short) I am hoping my daughter will share my love of football, and especially my Eagles, even with her lack of boy parts. My fourth resolution is to hopefully get a new job. Sadly last year, I became a member of the unemployed for several weeks, but then was hired as a "consultant" and have been at my current place ever since. I like the people there and my boss is a rock star, but I don't get any vacation or sick time, or other benefits even some of the workers at Walmart get(thankfully i have my Sugar Mama who helps out with that). Hopefully they will lift the hiring freeze they have and I can be hired full time(as this would count as getting a new job) but for now, their checks don't bounce, and we're still living the middle class dream so outside of my side gig here on the Yahoo! Contributor Network, I really can't complain(at least not to the level of my wife, where if complaining ever became an Olympic event, we could proudly display her medals in our living room right next to our Ketubah, as I think there is a line item in it mentioning dealing with a Jewish Wife's complaining, it's written mostly in Hebrew so I'm not positive, more a hypothesis from being a non-practicing Jew myself).

My fifth resolution is to write a book, as being that I am a published writer now, maybe I can take it to the next level. If Nicole Richie or Paris Hilton can write a book with barely a high school education, really can't anybody then (although I presume they had someone "helping" them right said books)? In this day and age of the internet, being an English major is no longer a prerequisite to writing a book, or in my case writing articles, as I was always more of a math guy, and of course getting by on being debonair(I sometimes like using big words to seem smarter), which if you ever saw how I dressed up, probably not the most accurate word to describe me(I'm mostly a jersey wearing guy, as on weekends that's how I roll, but if that ever comes into style, people will be consulting me like I'm a gay fashionista). I've always wanted to write a book for several reasons, first off, the fame that can sometimes come with it. Sometimes it seems to me the only thing you need to do to be on one of those panel shows like Meet the Press or Real Time with Bill Maher is have a book out, it give you instant "expert" status on being a person. Secondly, I always associated writing books with easy money. You write one of two books per year, and you can earn a six or seven figure salary, which being someone of my laziness, would work out well for me, as I'll never have J.K. Rowling kind of ideas or money, but I always dreamed of having a blog they turned into a movie or TV show, something like S%#t Gabe Says(c'mon Fox or ABC, we can make this happen to compete with Shatner, I know it's not an original idea, but if Paula Abdul's Live to Dance isn't a total knockoff of So You Think You Can Dance, or even America's Best Dance Crew (with her former Idol Panelist Randy Jackson), what's the big deal? CBS is even billing it as a new breakthrough show like it's never been done before. WOW! CBS executives must need to walk around with MC Hammer pants on with cojones that size to try and pull that off. Man I really went off on a tangent didn't I? Oops, back to my resolutions now.). The third reason I wanted to write a book is actually, never mind, I only had two, but usually you need three reasons in a list, just wanted to make it sound better.

My sixth resolution is to go to a championship parade, like I did back in 2008 for the first time in my life(here in the Philly area we had a 25 year Championship drought which I know isn't as bad as Cleveland or Seattle, cities with at least three major teams, or at least had three, sorry about the Sonics, Seattle). I realize I have little or no control over this one, as much as I yell. "Go team!"(or more accurately "Hey Ref, you're missing a heck of a game!"), unless I have a bat in my hand or a helmet on my head, rooting really hard can only take you so far to win said championship(but getting to be obnoxious is usually just a side benefit, I almost feel like laser pointer guy at a movie theater but can usually come through with a George Costanza like joke "That's gotta hurt!" that gets the people giggling and hence on my side). I also want my daughter to experience the joys of a championship parade, as she was only in utero when it happened before, and in the famous words of Gorilla Monsoon, "Close only counts in horseshoes and hand grenades." My main goal as her Daddy is to do whatever I can to keep her safe and to give her as many smiles as I can, and if I get to use a mid-80's wrestling announcing analogies while doing it, more power to me(Thanks Humanoids).

So these are my resolutions for 2011, big enough to just be attainable, not dumb enough to think I can hit the lottery or keeping the outside dream alive of going on Survivor(I dream a Survivor producer actually reads this and thinks, this is the guy we need to get on the show, he could be the next Rupert minus the beard or pirate like attitude, that in a nutshell is me). So whether 2011 is actually the year of Gabe or not, in the famous words of Joe Dirt, I'm gonna, "Keep on, keepin' on!" and be the best darn Gabe I can be. Before I go, if I do write a book, and you found this article even mildly amusing, feel free to help a brotha out, I'll even sign it for you as I can't give my autograph out fast enough(I told you I was an attention whore, asking for my autograph would be my drug of choice). So have a great 2011, and hopefully this isn't the last you'll be hearing from this guy, but if it is, the pleasure has been all yours as I told you, 2011 is the year of GABE!!!

By Gabe Venit - I am a man of many talents as besides having a unique ability to generally make people laugh, I am also quite the athlete. After winning my first Heisman trophy, I then went on to be the top pick in the NFL...  
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Local artist puts vibrant wagging tongues, wet snouts to canvas - Bay News 9

20 May 2012 at 11:05pm  What began two years ago as a friend asking a friend to paint a family pet for a Christmas gift turned into a small custom pet ... especially as a small business person," she said. "I like the idea of things that involve local community ...

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Brand your organization with corporate gift baskets and Christmas gift basket...

20 May 2012 at 5:57pm  If there are, then go and see what people are saying about the website. You will have an idea about the quality of their corporate gift baskets and Christmas gift baskets, the time taken to deliver and the quality of customer service. As far as branding ...

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Motorcycle Riders Gift Purchasing Guide - 1UP.COM

19 May 2012 at 3:04am  Do you have a motorcyclist in your family? Questioning what to get them this year for Christmas? This is a gift acquiring guide with some tips for you. Gear is usually a good idea. Just like clothes, I do not think you could ever have enough apparel.

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Promotional Corporate Gift Basket Ideas - 1UP.COM

15 May 2012 at 1:24pm  Never offer gifts within a bidding process, even if Christmas or some other holiday is near. They are often seen as bribes. Usually, gifts should never be given to a business if the business is still in negotiations along with you over an offer or contract.

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