
Air Forte Review
Joe takes to the sky in an attempt to catch a flying, moustachioed octopus in Air Forte.
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Warhammer 40K: Space Marine coming to PC
Relic's third person shooter is set to come to the PC too.
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G.Skill squeezes 2GHz out of 49GB of memory
Combined with EVGA's SR-2 motherboard, G.Skill has managed to eek out 2GHz from 49GB of memory.
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OpenGL 4.1 released
The latest version of the OpenGL graphics standard, OpenGL 4.1, has been announced.
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MeeGo heads into cars
MeeGo - the amalgamation of Moblin and Maemo - is set to power in-car 'infotainment.'
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iPhone Review: Helsing’s Fire
Egads! London has been invaded by monsters, who skulk through the shadowy, smoggy streets in search of fair maidens to devour. All that stands in their way is vampire hunter Van Helsing (and his man-servant, Raffton), who much push back this blight with naught but a handful of torches and a few monster-slaying tonics.
From the pitch you’d expect Helsing’s Fire to be just another clumsy action game, but it’s actually a rather gentle puzzle game played from the top-down perspective. The aim of the game is still to purge London of monsters, but it’s done with brains rather than brawn.
As with most puzzle games the gameplay is fairly straightforward at first, but quickly escalates as nuances and complications are layered on top of the core rules. To start with it’s merely a matter of positioning your flaming torch so that you cast rays of light on as many monsters as possible, then using colour-coded tonics to destroy them utterly. Later levels introduce more complicated elements though – shielded foes, fair maidens who must be protected and skellingtons who’ll extinguish your torch should you get too close.
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