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-   -   What Game Are You Playing Right Now? (https://www.musicbanter.com/media/34347-what-game-you-playing-right-now.html)

System101 04-22-2011 04:34 PM

Marvel vs Capcom3

Howard the Duck 04-22-2011 08:03 PM

MvC 2 rocks all kinds of @$$

noise 04-23-2011 07:20 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by tore (Post 1038609)
Metal Slug is great fun :) Try the third if you can get your hands on it .. it's brilliant!

oh yes, i have them all!

now playing:
Do-Re-Mi Fantasy - Milon no Dokidoki Daibouken

it's a very polished platformer for Super Famicom (Japanese version of SNES). great graphics (for 1996), great mechanics, and very entertaining gameplay. this is 16-bit gaming at its best!

http://s.uvlist.net/l/y2006/04/16604.jpg

http://s.uvlist.net/l/y2006/04/16605.jpg

Howard the Duck 04-24-2011 02:54 AM

going back to finishing Grandia III

that and Tales of the Abyss are my fave JRPGs at the mo'

Scissorman 04-24-2011 05:36 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Il Duce (Post 1041431)
going back to finishing Grandia III

Is it true that it is worse than the first 2?

Howard the Duck 04-24-2011 05:46 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Scissorman (Post 1041463)
Is it true that it is worse than the first 2?

haven't played the first 2, but Grandia Xtreme is total CRAP

3 has one of the best battle systems ever, it's just that there's not much challenge

Scissorman 04-24-2011 05:53 AM

The first 2 are awesome, although they have really crappy and pixelated graphics.

Howard the Duck 04-24-2011 06:07 AM

3 has pretty nifty graphics

Astronomer 04-24-2011 07:56 PM

Today I had to do the unthinkable but also forseeable action of cancelling my WoW subscription.

It had to be done, it was taking up wayyyy too much of my life.

EvilChuck 04-26-2011 05:33 PM

FAO Anyone who uses the PlayStation Network:

Quote:

Sony is warning its millions of PlayStation Network users to watch out for identity-theft scams after hackers breached its security and plundered the user names, passwords, addresses, birth dates, and other information used to register accounts.

The stolen information may also include payment-card data, purchase history, billing addresses, and security answers used to change passwords, Sony said on Tuesday. The company plans to keep the hacked system offline for the time being, and to restore services gradually. The advisory also applies to users of Sony's related Qriocity network.
Click here to find out more!

Sony's stunning admission came six days after the PlayStation Network was taken down following what the company described as an “external intrusion”.

Sony had already come under fire for a copyright lawsuit targeting customers who published instructions for unlocking the game console so it could run games and applications not officially sanctioned by the company. The criticism only grew after Sony lawyers sought detailed records belonging to hacker George Hotz, including the IP addresses of everyone who visited his jailbreaking website over a span of 26 months.

Hackers howled with displeasure saying they should have a right to modify the hardware they legally own. Sony recently settled that case, but Hotz, whose hacker moniker is GeoHot, has remained highly critical of the company. Many have also objected to the removal of the so-called OtherOS, which allowed PlayStation 3 consoles to run Linux.

Sony's advisory on Tuesday means that the company was likely storing passwords, credit card numbers, expiration dates, and other sensitive information unhashed and unencrypted on its servers. Sony didn't say if its website complied with data-security standards established by the Payment Card Industry.

Sony reminded users located in the US that they're entitled to receive one credit report per year from each of the three major credit bureaus. The company didn't offer to pay for any sort of credit monitoring service to help ensure the information it lost isn't used in identity-theft ruses against its users.

“When the PlayStation Network and Qriocity services are fully restored, we strongly recommend that you log on and change your password,” advises a letter that Sony is sending to its users.

Of course, that suggestion assumes users continue to trust Sony to safeguard their information and stand behind assurances that the PlayStation Network is secure, and at the moment there's little evidence to support that assumption.
User data stolen in Sony PlayStation Network hack attack ? The Register


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