




In 1986, a man was born with the skills and attention to detail needed to methodically test video games and search out bugs which could otherwise make your game unplayable. Today, still wanted by many companies, he lives as a contract video game tester. If you have a game, if no one else can test it, and if I'm available, maybe you can hire... Me.
Assassin’s Creed IV Black Flag begins in 1715, when pirates established a lawless republic in the Caribbean and ruled the land and seas. These outlaws paralyzed navies, halted international trade, and plundered vast fortunes. They threatened the power structures that ruled Europe, inspired the imaginations of millions, and left a legacy that still endures.
In a scenario drawn from the film, The LEGO Movie Videogame puts you into the role of Emmet, an ordinary, rules-following, perfectly average LEGO minifigure who is mistakenly identified as the most extraordinary person--and the key to saving the world. Guide him as he is drafted into a fellowship of strangers on an epic quest to stop an evil tyrant, a journey for which Emmet is hopelessly and hilariously underprepared.
In The LEGO Movie Videogame you will be able to collect and use LEGO instruction pages to build construction sets or harness the awesome power of the Master Builders to virtually build extraordinary LEGO creations along the way. With more than 90 characters inspired by the film and 15 exciting levels, you can build and adventure like never before.
One of the major things that annoys me about the general news media is how it blows things way out of proportion. Blaming movies, music and video games for violence in youths. While any violence at all can bring out the violence in another person they must have latent anger within them in order to express it at all. A video game can't turn a person that's never had violent tendencies into a murderer. It's not just not possible.
More details after the jump...