Quico’s best friend, Monster, is a huge beast with razor-sharp teeth, but that doesn’t scare Quico away from playing with him. That said, Monster does have a very dangerous problem: an addiction to poisonous frogs. The minute he sees one hop by, he’ll scarf it down and fly into a violent, frog-induced rage where no one, including Quico, is safe. And yet, Quico loves his Monster and wants to save him. As Quico, players will build their friendship with Monster by solving puzzles together and adventuring through a magical, surrealist world. Players will need to learn to use Monster’s emotions, both good and bad, to their advantage if they want to complete their search for a cure and save their pal.
System Requirements:
OS: Windows XP, Vista, Windows 7 Processor: 2.2 GHz dual core or better Memory: 1 GB RAM Graphics: NVIDIA GeForce 6800GT, ATI Radeon X1800 or better DirectX®: 9.0c Hard Drive: 4 GB HD space Sound: Windows compatible sound card Additional: Game supports Multi-Monitor
Repack Information: -Crack: FLT -Deleted: Nothing -Included: Original Soundtrack -Audio: Lossless -Drivers: Direct X, VCRedist -Install time: 5 -> 10 mins -Size: 1,13 GB -Size after install: 1,89GB
Set in an abandoned sawmill nestled high in the Italian mountains, Anna challenges the player to uncover horrific clues and use them to solve puzzles related to your character’s dark past. The player’s behavior does not only determine the mental health of the main character but can also change locations and unveil new secrets leading to one of eight possible endings.
Anna - Extended Edition has been given an overhaul based on the feedback of the thousands of players of the original Anna. It features more environments, more hours of game play, more puzzles, additional gameplay features, enhanced graphics and an improved interface. Anna – Extended Edition is sure to please fans of psychological horror games and offer an even more chilling gameplay experience with these new additions.
System Requirements:
*OS: Windows XP/Vista/7
*CPU: 3 Ghz
*RAM: 1GB
*Video: 256 MB
*Sound Card: Sound device compatible with DirectX 9.0
Sharpen your axe, string your bow, brew your potions! Ancaria needs heroes like you. Grab your friends to join the resistance!
The once peaceful land of Ancaria is in grave danger. The evil Ashen empire has enslaved its population and is using the orc-like Grimmoc to wipe out the Seraphim, who swore to protect it. In order to defeat the empire you will have to prove yourself as a warrior by riding terrifying mounts, acquiring earth shattering skills and looting powerful weapons and valuable treasures. Grab your friends and join the resistance!
System Requirements:
OS: Windows XP/7
CPU: Pentium 4 3.0GHz, Athlon XP 3000+
RAM: 1 GB
VGA: GeForce 6600 GT 256MB, Radeon X1300 256MB
HDD: 2 GB
DirectX: DX 9
Repack Information:
-Crack: FLT -Deleted: Nothing -Audio: Lossless -Drivers: Direct X, VCRedist -Install time: 5 -> 10 mins -Size: 608MB -Size after install: 1,11GB
Far Cry® 3: Blood Dragon is THE Kick-Ass Cyber Shooter.
Welcome to an 80’s vision of the future. The year is 2007 and you are Sargent Rex Colt, a Mark IV Cyber Commando. Your mission: get the girl, kill the baddies, and save the world.
Experience every cliché of a VHS era vision of a nuclear future, where cyborgs, blood dragons, mutants, and Michael Biehn (Terminator, Aliens, Navy Seals) collide.
Playing Far Cry® 3 Blood Dragon does not require a copy of Far Cry® 3.
Trailer:
System Requirements:
Minimum System Requirements OS: Windows Vista/7 Processor: Intel Core 2 Duo @ 2.6 Ghz / AMD Athlon 64 X2 6000+ Memory: 4 Gb Video Memory: 512 Mb Video Card: nVidia GeForce 8800 / ATI Radeon HD 2900 Sound Card: DirectX Compatible DirectX: 10
Recommended System Requirements OS: Windows Vista/7/8 Processor: Intel Core i3 @ 2.9 GHz / AMD Phenom II X2 @ 3.4 GHz Memory: 6 Gb Video Memory: 1 Gb Video Card: nVidia GeForce GTX 560 / ATI Radeon HD 5870 Sound Card: DirectX Compatible DirectX: 11
The war on terrorism just got a whole lot deadlier! Play six anti-terrorism teams as they battle malign cells of covert hate-mongers and criminals who seek to bring fear and destruction to the European Union and her allies! Fight your way through levels based on real life locations, inspired by actual events. Take the fight to the enemy in France, Germany, the United Kingdom, Spain, Italy and Russia. You control special operations teams such as GSG-9, NOCS, Team Alfa and the SAS.
When Slender: The Eight Pages was released in the summer of 2012, horror fans praised its short, experimental, and completely free take on the genre. Manically dashing through the forest and trying to snag all eight pieces of paper before the creepy Slender Man finds you remains a surprisingly unnerving experience. Cut to spring of 2013, and we now have Slender: The Arrival on PC. This paid-for sequel attempts to pump up the horror experiment into a bigger (though still quite short) game, but it quickly becomes apparent that the simple mechanics of the original Slender crumble under the weight.
Most importantly, The Arrival remembers that the core of any good horror lies in its boogeyman. The Slender Man himself still stalks you with the same terrifying persistence he has in the original, exuding a menacing presence that evolves throughout the story in some unexpected ways. Though his iconic design may be simple, I still got freaked out every time I spotted his silhouette in the distance. You can't fight him, only run from him, and that in of itself makes him more frightening than most game monsters.
The world he haunts is larger and denser, as well. Instead of a dark forest, you’ll wander through abandoned homes, creepy mines, and sunbaked hillsides. Some of the better-lit areas look genuinely great. Trekking through autumnal forests and rummaging through homes that actually feel lived in make the world of Slender an interesting environment
Some impressive sound design surrounds you with an ambient soundtrack and jarring noises, and it really adds to the already creepy atmosphere. Boards creak, children whisper, and there are some truly terrifying moments that wouldn’t exist without the impeccable use of audio. Like all great horror games, Slender is best served in a dark room with a pair of headphones
These parts, at least, are done pretty well... but it's simply not enough. While I appreciate the lengths that developer Blue Isle went to flesh things out, The Arrival relies far too heavily on the rudimentary game mechanics of the original, which was only ever meant to last for a few minutes. Like its predecessor, the vast majority of The Arrival essentially boils down to finding a certain number of objects while an increasingly dangerous enemy stalks you. Whether it’s pieces of paper in a forest or generators in a mine, you’re repeating the exact same actions in every part of The Arrival. It feels like being asked to finish a Where’s Waldo book while your house burns down around you.
The fact that I got tired of it during a game this short shows just how repetitive The Arrival is. While a lucky player can dash through in about 20 minutes, it’ll probably take most people a few hours thanks to the unfair nature of the enemies. Slender Man and his minions don’t mind warping directly behind you and causing instant game over. The worst offender of this comes once you reach the abandoned mine and are introduced to a second enemy type. The Proxy, a creepy knife-wielding kid, stalks you throughout the level as you (yup, you guessed it) once again attempt to find a series of objects. He continually killed me with no warning whatsoever, which as you might imagine, gets pretty frustrating.
Although the mine level was genuinely spooky at first, it and many other areas quickly lose their terrifying charm once you’re forced to replay them dozens of times. I appreciate games that are tough yet fair, but those that arbitrarily punish their players sabotage their own fun. This problem persists throughout Slender: The Arrival. The horrifying atmosphere that Blue Isle manages to create is consistently squandered by dull mechanics and unfair difficulty spikes.
Slender: The Arrival manages to deliver some truly impressive scares, but you’ll have to wade through the muck of repetitive tasks and unfair enemies in order to experience them. I found more enjoyment in playing the free original installment, which delivers a powerful horror experience without the annoyances and filler. By trying to stretch the initial concept over five separate scenarios, Slender only succeeds in proving that some ideas are better left in the experimental phase.
From: IGN
Repack Information: -Deleted: Nothing -Audio: High Quality -Drivers: Direct X, VCRedist -Install time: 3 -> 5 mins -Size: 650MB -Size after install: 1,5GB