Molotov Cupcake of Handheld Heroes writes:
"BloodRayne wasn’t always a stylized, comic book-inspired adventure. No, the series has a very different background, having evolved from a third-person action/adventure game (three-dimensional, mind you) to the gorgeous side-scrolling slasher you see in BloodRayne: Betrayal. Frenetic, fluid, and positively gushing with decapitations, geysers of blood, and vampire antics, this retro throwback is an exciting new direction for Rayne. And while its sometimes finicky controls mar its attempt at fast-paced platforming, it’s still a satisfying play, even on its lowest difficulty."
Released in 2011, the original BloodRayne Betrayal was met with passionate reviews for its gorgeous graphics and punishing difficulty.
Oh boy, I was just looking at the original 2011 yesterday, and told myself " I couldn't beat it back then, but maybe I can now ". And this shows up xD
This is only worth a buy with the new desperately needed rebalanced difficulty. Thank God that was addressed.
Carlos writes "Backwards compatibility may not be everyone’s favourite feature on Xbox One, but there’s no denying that Xbox made a lot of fans happy with the announcement of Backwards Compatible games back at E3 2015. Since that point hundreds of games have arrived with a fresh breath of life on Xbox One.
Now though many of those classic titles are on sale with the Xbox Backwards Compatibility Super Sale running between 16th-22nd May 2017. But which ones are worth their asking price?"
I ordered:
Dark Void
Feeding Frenzy 1 & 2
Ghost Busters Sanctum
Earthworm Jim HD
Jurassic Park
Shadows of The Damned
Rtype Dimension
Bit Cultures writer Conner plays through his Steam library in alphabetical order, writes a brief summary of his experience on each game, and then gives them his own personal rating. Here's week 10 of Steam A to Z. This week - BlazBlue: Calamity Trigger, Blocks That Matter, BloodRayne: Betrayal, and Borderlands.