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Does One Award Warrant a Game of the Year Edition for Dead Island?
by Chris Pereira
22 May 2012 at 5:19pm

Dead Island is set to be re-released in a Game of the Year Edition package next month, a fact that is the source of some complaints. It's not so much that the game is being bundled with its DLC that is the problem; it's the labeling of the game as Game of the Year, a title which many feel it is not deserving of.

It is completely understandable why a publisher would want a game re-release to be positioned as a "Game of the Year Edition." That title carries with it a certain connotation of quality, that it was among the very best, if not the best, games released during the year it originally came out. Game of the Year Editions are commonly associated with the likes of Morrowind, Oblivion, Fallout 3, Red Dead Redemption, and other critically acclaimed games. There is a certain expectation that a GotY Edition consists of a terrific game and bonus content (be it downloadable content or expansion packs) that early adopters had to pay extra for, with all of this often coming at a sub-$60 price.



What If the Cost of Games Continued to Rise Since the '80s?
by Marty Sliva
22 May 2012 at 5:07pm

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1UP COVER STORY

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

What If the Cost of Games Continued to Rise Since the '80s? Cover Story: A sad look at a hobby that became too damn expensive.

December 12, 1985

You'll never guess what I got for my birthday! I woke up this morning, walked into the living room, and saw Dad playing Nintendo in front of the TV! He was having trouble with the first level of Mario, so I sat down and helped him jump over the pits until we got to the flagpole at the end. After that, we brought out the Zapper and played Duck Hunt until dinner time. Mom got kinda mad at Dad for buying something so expensive, but he told her that my birthday only comes once a year.



What If the 1993 Video Game Violence Hearings Resulted in Government Censorship?
by 1UP Staff
22 May 2012 at 3:30pm

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1UP COVER STORY

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

What If the 1993 Video Game Violence Hearings Resulted in Government Censorship? Cover Story: Peer into a dark and twisted present we'll (thankfully) never know.

I

n late 1993, state senators and certified oldsters Joseph Lieberman and Herb Khol got a whiff of this whole "video games" thing and decided to use their unholy powers to investigate the issue. While our friends in Germany and Australia often find amazing games banned outright or plagued with hilariously conspicuous censorship, we Americans escaped with a barely perceptible slap on the wrists thanks to the efforts of testifying industry vets who actually knew the subject at hand. But one can only wonder what the '90s gaming landscape (and beyond) would have looked like if the iron fist of government oppression punched the living daylights out of our beloved hobby...



Book Review: Exploring Video Gaming's Near-Death with "1983"
by Jeremy Parish
22 May 2012 at 2:18pm

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1UP COVER STORY

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

Book Review: Exploring Video Gaming's Near-Death with "1983" Cover Story: Thirty years ago, video games almost died. We examine the possibilities.

W

ith his latest book, 1983, game journalist and historian Chris Kohler has chosen to take a slightly different tack then he employed for his massive treatise Power Up: How America Gave Video Games an Extra Life a few years back. Rather than approaching the topic of video games from a wide-ranging, all-inclusive perspective, Kohler instead drills down here into a single crucial moment in time for the young medium: The near-crash of the industry in year 1983.

Despite the Orwellian overtones of the title Kohler has selected for his work, there's nothing ominous about the story contained herein -- perhaps, except, the idea that video gaming could have been snuffed out entirely a mere decade after Pong's debut. A combination of gold-rush greed, incompetence, and '80s corporate culture nearly suffocated the fledging entertainment medium just as it was hitting its stride. The Warner corporation's eagerness to cash in on their purchase of Atari, combined with the influx of low-quality, externally developed 2600 games after Activision broke away to become the first third-party developer, nearly buried the industry beneath a deluge of self-cannibalizing mediocrity.



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.

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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.





Gold Engagement Rings

10 White Gold Engagement Rings

White Gold is alloy of gold and the nickel or palladium. The highest quality white gold is 17 karat and is gold and palladium. Gold is known to tarnish so most jewelers coat bands with rhodium to protect the shine. White Gold Engagement Rings are popular because they look like platinum but cost considerably less. If you are looking for a white gold engagement ring, you have many options to pick from. Here is a list of 10 white Gold Engagement Rings.

1.) 1/5 CT. Princess Cut Diamond Solitaire Engagement Ring by www.zales.com.

This white gold engagement ring is a classy look for any woman. The band is a polished white gold with 1 princess cut diamond. The diamond is held in a prong setting. It was originally priced at $299.00 but now it is on sale at $269.00. It is available in sizes 5 to 10. It is available online at www.zales.com and in their stores. It is a popular ring so check out online.

2.) 1/4 CT. Diamond Solitaire Engagement Ring by www.zales.com.

This white gold engagement ring is great look for a woman who likes a simple, uniform design. It is 14K white gold. It has 1 1/4 CT. round diamond in a six prong setting. It is originally priced at $399.00 but it is on sale now for $359.00. It is available in sizes 5 to 10. It is available online at www.zales.com or at one of their stores. This band is a very popular item so add this beautiful ring to the finger of your loved one.

3.) Three-Stone Diamond Ring 1CT. by www.reeds.com.

This ring is a classic touch of white gold and diamonds. It is a polished shined ring with three princess cut diamonds that are 1CT. It is 14K white gold. The ring is 4 millimeters at the top and tapers down to 2 millimeters at the bottom. It is available in sizes 5 to 9. The suggested retail price is $2, 950.00 but right now it is on sale for $1, 799.95. It is a nice white gold engagement ring for a woman who wants more than the traditional solitaire engagement ring. It is available at www.reeds.com or at their stores.

4.) Princess Diamond Engagement Ring 3/4CT. by www.reeds.com.

This white gold engagement ring is a great way to add personal flair to the traditional solitaire diamond. It is 14K white gold. It features a 1/3CT. princess-cut diamond center stone with princess-cut side stones. It is priced at $1, 499.95. It is available in sizes 5 to 9. It is available online at www.reeds.com or at one of their stores. This is a really unique ring at a good price so check out the website.

5.) Diamond Ring 3CT. by www.reeds.com.

This white gold engagement ring is a totally different play on the traditional engagement ring. It is a band made out of 14K polished white gold. The center stones are 6 invisible set princess cut diamonds surrounded by baguette and round diamonds. Then the band has more baguette and round diamonds. The top of the ring is 13 x 14millimeters. The band is 11 millimeters at the top and tapers down to 6 millimeters at the bottom. It was priced $4, 750.00 but it is now on sale for $3, 999.95. It is available in sizes 6 to 8. It is a white gold engagement ring with the flair of a pinky ring. It is available online at www.reeds.com or a one of their stores.

6.) Diamond Ring 1/2CT. by www.reeds.com.

This ring is a beautiful white gold engagement ring. The center stone is a 1/4CT. round diamond. It is surrounded by round diamonds and has round diamonds on the two supporting shoulders. It has a total of 1/2 carats in diamonds. The white gold has a high polished finish. It measures out at 8 millimeters at its thickest point and 2 millimeters at the bottom. It is priced at $995.00. It is available in sizes 5 to 8. It is available online at www.reeds.com and at their stores.

7.) 1/4CT. Princess Cut Diamond Solitaire by www.kay.com.

By tell_it - Even at an early age, he discovered a passion for writing and communication. He attended Eastern Michigan University, earning a Bachelors in Architecture. He also enjoys making hip hop beats for his own use, ...  


Most of my jewelry is yellow Gold but I found?
this gorgeous White Gold engagement ring that I really want and does not come in yellow Gold. I know It all depends on what I like but for those of you who are fashion savvy, would you wear two different color metals on the same finger or with all Gold jewelery?

Get the answers...


Best metal for an engagement ring setting?
Ladies Only - Would you prefer a platinum or white gold engagement ring? Assume both rings are identical and so is the diamond - don't factor cost into your answer. What metal do you prefer and why?

Get the answers...


rose gold engagement ring decision dilemma?
So, my fiance, (already engaged, no ring...) likes rose gold, and I know her favorite color is purple. I'm having trouble finding engagement rings in rose gold, much less with an accent stone(s) in purple(ish) color. Anybody know a good website I could check out? I've already checked Kays, Zales, and a few other places.. Also, I don't really know much about rings, is this one appropriate for engagement? or is it considered a "right hand" ring? http://www1.macys.com/catalog/product/index.ognc?ID=462362&PseudoCat=se-xx-xx-xx.esn_results looking to spend up to $3,000(US)

Get the answers...

[[ct]]: Gold Engagement Rings


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22 May 2012 at 12:13am


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21 May 2012 at 5:15am


JUST A FRIEND - (Biz Markie cover)

9 May 2012 at 4:16pm


Next page: Disney Princess Kitchen Play Set


Gold Engagement Rings News


JewelOcean Now Makes It Easier for Customers to Get Engagement with Its Cheap...

22 May 2012 at 8:11pm 

JewelOcean Now Makes It Easier for Customers to Get Engagement with Its Cheap ...
Houston Chronicle
For customers who are looking for alternate engagement ring designs, the collection has many designs of rose gold engagement rings available on discount prices. The cheap diamond rings collection was launched this summer and it has already garnered a ...

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Pearl Rings have a new home at JewelOcean - San Francisco Chronicle (press re...

13 May 2012 at 11:04am 

PR Web

Pearl Rings have a new home at JewelOcean
San Francisco Chronicle (press release)
The new affordable rings collection at JewelOcean has many designs of pearl engagement rings available for women. Women would also love to find that at JewelOcean , they can customize pearls and set in on their Rose gold engagement rings, ...
JewelOcean New Ruby Rings Collection Is Making a Big Splash of Red this SummerVirtual-Strategy Magazine
Get a splash of Purple with the new Amethyst Rings collection at JewelOceanAlbany Times Union

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