Recent Comments
  • Partner links

  • Archive for the ‘Communities’ Category

    Absolutely, if you want to play the FarmVille game, you should enter to your Facebook account. Then, after you already have a FarmVille account, you can start the game by clicking “Play FarmVille Now!” The button can you find on any related posts of FV. The next step, you can choose a character and customize any features to become your farmer.

    If the character refers you has been already created, you can begin to play. At once, the crop is complete with harvest; you need to do it with just a simple click on the crop. After harvesting, you can continue to look for the other empty plot by hovering over several areas. When it shows the sign of “fallow land”, click it, so your character will plow it. If you are success to plow one plot, it means you have to pay 15 coins, but you will earn one experience point (XP).

    While it doubtlessly remains an integral part of my life, at times I find it increasingly difficult to defend the gaming community. Let me explain.

    A while ago, film critic Roger Ebert stated that video games could never be art, and typically a sea of angry gamers swelled up, giant and menacing, to show him the error of his ways.

    Recently, Ebert reiterated his point, much to the dismay of the countless individuals who partook in the assault against him the first time around; and in his latest blog, he reverts back (albeit briefly) to the very same matter.

    This brings me to my issue, and I’m directing this towards a very specific demographic; namely, those who opposed Ebert’s argument and took a rather vocal, insulting and/or patronising approach to telling him so. The issue I speak of, for want of a better word, is simply ignorance.

    The Rogue Trader early years:

    The rule book written by Rick Priestley for the Warhammer 40000 game, Rogue Trader was published in 1987, this first issue is massively different to any of the future issues. It is mainly a cross between RPG’s and classic Table Top Games, rather than a pure Table Top Battle Game. Rogue Trader had more in depth information and background on the wider reaches of the 40K universe, its races and their technologies, unlike later editions of the game, for me this is why it is considered a prized collectors’ piece and holds a special place in my collection.

    This Rulebook is considered much less rigid in the rules of 40K than later editions, as it employed a much broader set of views within the narration than was common in future versions and readily encouraged mixed faction forces.