Unlimited Video Game Rentals

Why are some game developers and producers to keep the games crap?
I just bought one of the worst racing games I have Ever played. I was at the video store was closing a sale and picked up some games are not too expensive. Test Drive Unlimited has been one of them, even if I paid $ 10 for which I still feel like I've been booted. Why the press Atari same shit? You can not change the controls, physics sucks. I know this is an arcade style of racing, but still. Need for Speed before ricer are 100 times better than this game all you have is that the selection of cars and details of these landscapes and all the rest of the game makes me want to throw in the trash. I rented the new Godzilla Unleashed game a couple of weeks and Atari. Thank God I rented before buy. I beat him at 3 am and I thought it was released before being finished, the kinematics or even encouraged. Looks like I will add to the list of producers Atari game not buying more.
Even movie companies because of shit movie releases, Theres a huge market for … Never without looking to buy a video game is and how useful. Although they tend to play Russian roulette in some movies. Try gamespot.com
Video Game Rentals
|
|
Mission: Impossible–Ghost Protocol $8.00 In the exciting fourth entry in the successful action series, an attack on the Kremlin leaves IMF agent Ethan Hunt (Tom Cruise) and his team falsely accused of international terrorism. Forced to go underground, they must race against time to clear their names while trying to stop a plot to orchestrate a nuclear war between the United States and Russia. Jeremy Renner, Simon Pegg, Paula Patton, Mich… |
|
|
The King’s Speech $6.22 Four Academy Awards–including Best Picture, Director, and Actor–went to this biopic of 1930s Britain’s King George VI. Colin Firth shines as the monarch whose stuttering is seen as a liability in an age when leaders must be appealing on the radio and in newsreels. George (then Prince Albert) turns to Australian speech therapist Lionel Logue (Geoffrey Rush) for help before ascending to the throne… |
|
|
Inside Job $7.98 As he did with the occupation of Iraq in No End in Sight, Charles Ferguson shines a light on the global financial crisis in Inside Job. Accompanied by narration from Matt Damon, Ferguson begins and ends in Iceland, a flourishing country that gave American-style banking a try–and paid the price. Then he looks at the spectacular rise and cataclysmic fall of deregulation in the United States. Unlike… |