100°

MMOHut: FusionFall to go Full Free to Play

MMOHut, "Cartoon Network's FusionFall was one of the coolest browser based MMORPGs I ever played. The trouble was you could only explore the first major area on a free account. To see the rest of the world, players had to sign up for a monthly subscription. Well not anymore! The developers gave hints late last year that the game would be moving from a 'freemium' model to a free to play model..."

100°

FusionFall, the Cartoon Network MMO, is Being Revived. And Remade.

A group of dedicated fans is reviving the Cartoon Network MMO FusionFall. The dev team recently released a limited early-access test build

Read Full Story >>
geekreply.com
starboy112469d ago

Wow, I had a little eddy sprite during the original fusion fall. I'm glad to see it back

aarogree2469d ago

I was a big Ben 10 fan back when I played the game. Most of the items I used were Ben 10-themed.

Mangaman272469d ago

Hopefully they don't get sued for licencing

aarogree2469d ago

I think they would have been already.

mattdavisop2468d ago

Cartoon Network the channel of my childhood :D

JackTheLiz2468d ago

So similar to what Toontown Rewritten is doing? Nice!

aarogree2468d ago

Well, FusionFall Retro is. FusionFall Legacy is very different and akin to a fan-mod, an extensive one at that.

10°

MMOHut: Unity - The Future of Browser Games

MMOHut, "Traditionally, browser based MMORPGs were either text based or built using Adobe Flash or Shockwave. There are dozens of high quality browser games like RuneScape that utilize these methods, and they are still popular options. But a new platform for creating browser games has emerged. It offers developers a powerful and highly versatile all-in-one tool. That tool is Unity.."

10°

MMOHut: New and Improved Browser MMORPGs

MMOHut, "Browser games have traditionally been thought of as second-rate options for gamers who don’t have the computer hardware to handle more desirable client MMORPGs. For the most part, this stereotype has been true. Browser games consisted of text and images, and it took a whole lot of imagination to make something happen with those..."