Leaked images and a survival video of new maps Boardwalk, Gulch and Parish.
Author: DestroyRepeat
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MW3 New Game Mode: Roll Call – Information
Good News for all your Call of Duty junkies out there Infinity Ward and Activision are hosting a sneak peek to lucky gamers. The catch, because there always is right… is that the sneak peek takes place in good ole sunny Southern California. While that all may seem fine and dandy the new mode is called Roll Call and looks to be the next game mode for MW3. Also in order to become eligible to come to the sneak peek you have to enter via the link below. The new game mode will be the next Elite content drop and seems like it might be somewhat of a game changer for COD fans. We are keeping our fingers crossed for this one.
https://profile.callofduty.com/sweeps/mw3rollcall/entrydetails
via Win A sneak peek at MW3′s new Game Mode (Located in California) | GamersBliss.
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Michael Phelps Addicted To Call Of Duty
Michael Phelps, the American swimmer and 16-time Olympic medal winner, may be addicted to “Call of Duty.”
The Daily Herald reports that an interview Phelps gave the sports site ThePostGame prompted Liz Woolley, founder of a network for addicted gamers, to warn the Olympian about the dangers he may be facing with his time spent in front of the the screen.
“Any time you get up to more than a couple of hours per day regularly, it can start to interfere with your normal life, your job, your family, your friends and your social life,” Woolley said. “But it can be even more dangerous for people like [Phelps] who are highly driven and competitive, which of course elite athletes and swimmers have to be. The games can be used as an escape from the pressures of training or competition, but it has to be moderated carefully or it can have terrible repercussions.”
Woolley notes that “very high achievers” run a particularly high risk here because they are predisposed to intensely competitive nature. In the original interview, Phelps seems to admit as much when he discusses playing the game online:
via Is Michael Phelps Addicted To “Call Of Duty?” – International Business Times.
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Playable Black Ops 2 zombies desire over multiplayer
The highly anticipated follow up to Call of Duty Black Ops is not set for release until November – a fair while away. However, we’ve just heard that lucky attendees of an upcoming expo will have the chance to play Black Ops 2 as early as August – next month!
As far as we’re aware, this is going to be the first opportunity for general members of the public to have a chance to play the game before it’s out in November. GameStop has announced that they’re holding the ‘GameStop Expo 2012′ and Black Ops 2 is just one of the playable titles that is on a list including others such as FIFA 13, Medal of Honor: Warfighter and PlayStation All-Stars Battle Royale.
While it is confirmed that Black Ops 2 will be playable at the event on August 29th, we also have confirmation that multiplayer will be playable as well! That is a pretty big deal right there, as nobody has seen multiplayer footage for the game as of yet.
From the Expo website:
”Get hands-on experience at the Activision booth with Call of Duty: Black Ops II — including multiplayer — and the new Skylanders Giants products”.
Considering that the GamesStop Expo already has a major coup in getting multiplayer to the event, we wonder what the odds are on seeing a first gameplay preview of zombies mode?
As usual, Treyarch are being ultra secretive about their plans for Black Ops 2 zombies, although you would have to feel that some sort of reveal has to be coming sooner rather than later. The GamesStop Expo doesn’t seem like the most ‘prestigious’ of events at first glance, but if Treyarch deem it big enough to unveil multiplayer for the first time, then maybe we’ll get a zombies surprise as well.
Like Rockstar and GTA V, do you feel that Treyarch are taking too long to show off multiplayer and zombies? Does the delays just keep you more excited, or are you starting to get frustrated with the way developers like to play the waiting game now? The bottom line is Black Ops 2 multiplayer is coming next month – we can’t wait.
Source: http://www.product-reviews.net/2012/07/27/playable-black-ops-2-zombies-desire-over-multiplayer/
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Call Of Duty TV ad gets daytime ban
An advert for the video game Call Of Duty: Modern Warfare 3 has been banned from daytime screening because of its scenes of violence and destruction, a watchdog has ruled.
Scenes in the television ad for the game include buildings exploding and catching fire, armed men firing at a lorry until it crashes and a helicopter firing rockets.
The action, set in New York, London and Paris, is accompanied by a voice-over saying: “The world as you knew it is gone. How far will you go to bring it back?”
Two viewers complained that the ad was inappropriate for broadcast during the day when children would be watching. One of them reported that their children aged between two and four had been frightened by the ad.
The game broke records on its launch in November with sales of more than 6.5 million copies in the UK and the US within 24 hours alone. It has been awarded an 18 certificate from the BBFC due to its graphic violence and real-world settings.
Activision, the game’s publisher, said the ad had been restricted from viewing by children, which had been passed on broadcasters, but screened on Sky Sports 1 at 2.30pm during a Premier League football match.
The company said the ad did not screen before, during or immediately after a children’s programme and had been specially edited to remove all violent and threatening content.
Upholding the complaints, the Advertising Standards Authority said: “We considered that the scenes of violence and destruction, together with the sound effects and music, could cause distress to some children who might see the ad.
“Although we noted that the ad was only shown during the football, we concluded that it was inappropriate for broadcast during the day when young children might be watching and the ex-kids restriction was insufficient.”
It ruled that the ad must not be broadcast again before 7.30pm.
Copyright © 2012 The Press Association. All rights reserved.
via The Press Association: Call Of Duty TV ad gets daytime ban.
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What The Dark Knight Rises and Call of Duty: Black Ops 2 Have in Common
The Dark Knight Rises’ Bane is no occupier. He’s a gigantic bruiser wearing a metal cage on his face. He’s a member of an The Dark Knight Rises ancient organization bent on ripping civilization to pieces. He’s a supervillain.
And yet, many on the internet have pointed out that Bane eagerly wears the hat of a populist, 99% avenger as he goes about his supervillainish activities. He constantly monologizes on the wealthy who have taken everything from the people of Gotham, and encourages people to rob them, destroy their homes, and try them before a kangaroo court run by a more-eccentric-than-usual scarecrow. As I said before, it’s not Occupy explicitly. The real conflict in TDKR is much more fantastic than all of that. But it’s not hard to see the connections between the Occupy movement and the villains of Nolan’s third Batmovie. Reign of Terror influences aside, here in 2012 you don’t get to just ignore the effect of Occupy in the real world.
There’s a similar strain in Call of Duty: Black Ops 2, Treyarch’s near-future drone hacking horror show. Here, the target is some combination of Wikileaks and Anonymous, or counter-culture internet heroes in general. The connection is a little more explicit than in TDKR — the Guy Fawkes mask has shown up in some of the game’s promotional materials.
In CoD, the villain is set up to be a Julian Assange-style celebrity, as established by his legions of YouTube followers and occasional magazine covers. Once again, the villain only wears internet populism as a mask – as it turns out, he was a “narco-terrorist” hell bent some sort of goal that involves laying waste to America with a drone army. Call of Duty: Black Ops 2 isn’t out yet, of course. I’ve always thought that the Call of Duty franchise was much more nuanced than people gave it credit for. But I’d be surprised if the hero’s solution to some of these problems didn’t involve shooting a whole lot of dudes.
These are two of the biggest entertainment properties of the year, and they both carry a troubling undercurrent. Both take some of the broadest populist movements on the planet and suggest that their members are duped sheep being manipulated by a criminal mastermind whose goals are chaos and destruction. And both, assumedly, suggest that these situations can only be rectified by extreme force.
TDKR does not, and Black Ops 2 probably will not, have any kind of actual specific political agenda. These are supervillain stories and can free themselves from any such associations by calling out the defense that they are just entertainment, and fairly ridiculous entertainment at that. For TDKR, it’s a good defense – it’s a fun, entertaining movie, and people should go see it for that reason. That doesn’t mean that what we consume doesn’t, to some degree, color the way we look at the world.
Action movies and video games are righteous and interventionist by nature – the hero usually knows something not everyone else does, and he has to act on that knowledge decisively and violently. But by referencing Anonymous and Occupy, these two go beyond general jingoism to something more specific. They suggest that populism isn’t to be trusted, and will ultimately destroy America.
What we consume doesn’t just shape the way we look at the world, it’s shaped by it as well. The anxieties of a general populous watching the angry and the restless gathering in Zucotti Park, or on internet forums, are on full display here. Heroes and villains make sense of these general rumblings, casting them in roles we feel comfortable with. Maybe we’ll see some stories with the roles reversed as well.
via What The Dark Knight Rises and Call of Duty: Black Ops 2 Have in Common – Forbes.















