GameZone: "Brutally Unfair Tactics Totally OK Now, or B.U.T.T.O.N, takes the interactivity of the digital party game and makes it a more physical, social game night type of experience. This game, though extremely simple in its premise, actually manages to bring something to the party game genre that’s been missing for a long time: fun."
B.U.T.T.O.N. is a physical party game for 2-8 players. Step back away from the computer, race to the keyboard/controllers through physical space, and do whatever it takes to win (or to avoid losing). Act like a monkey, jump up and down, wrestle over the keyboard/controllers, cheat your competitors, and above all, expect the unexpected. Brutally unfair tactics are, after all, totally OK now!
GameZone's David Sanchez gives the Top 5 Party Games of All Time.
Decent list. I would put timesplitters 2 in there. It aged a lot better then goldeneye but has practically the same gameplay. Glad they mentioned bomberman as well.
My personal list would include:
Mario party (1,2,3,6,7)
Mario kart (64, double dash)
Bomberman (any but zero)
Timesplitters (2,3, or even 007 or perfect dark)
Monkey ball
Smash brothers brawl & melee
Street fighter 2^
Left for dead
Diddy Kong racing
Mario golf
My top 10 in no order, might have forgot a few.
Bomberman
Modern Warfare 1
Timesplitters 2
and def Smash Bros. my friends and I play melee and Brawl all the time
also Mario Kart and Crash Team Racing
Justin Belin writes, "For the most part, the debate as to the merit and the extent of artistic expression that is contained within electronic entertainment (read: videogames) has grown long in the tooth by 2011. Droves of believers have wasted endless virtual breath crying foul at the well-documented and only recently pseudo-retracted blasphemy of Roger Ebert. Because ultimately, and to paraphrase another tired argument, art is in the eye of the beholder. If you look upon Shadow of the Colossus, Flower, Braid, Catherine, or even Modern Warfare and see something that speaks to you with the same voice you hear when you gaze upon the canvases of Thomas Eakins, Keith Haring, or even Jim Lee, there is simply nothing a movie critic, or anyone, can do to tell you with any conviction that your feelings are wrong."
Never heard of this game before...but i think i will pass on it