Six Years After Release, Bethesda-Published FPS Brink Is Now Free
Brink is now free, and it has more players than two other FPSes.
Brink is now free, and it has more players than two other FPSes.
The chicken business is volatile, so this Chinese poultry company is stepping into the video game market.
"Tempo" is the latest project from Brink developer Splash Damage; check out a trailer now.
CEO Paul Wedgwood states multiplatform squad-based first-person shooter generated $120-140 million in revenue from multimillion sales.
Johnny brings you news of Brink passing the 2.5 million sales mark, the next Call of Duty being teased, and Lollipop Chainsaw being...well, just watch.
This week, we cover new titles Journey, Warp, Defenders of Ardania, and Shoot Many Robots, as well as old titles, Reality Fighters, Ridge Racer, BioShock 2, Phineas and Ferb: Across ...
Splash Damage CEO promises upcoming games will explore new platforms, "take full advantage" of industry changes like free-to-play and mobile markets.
Johnny gets on his soapbox and takes a look at the state of intellectual property in the games industry. Warning: contains silliness.
We compare how Brink looks across the Xbox 360, PlayStation 3, and PC.
This week in Digital Downloads we've got planes, fireballs, and blobs.
L.A. Noire, Infamous 2, Brink, NCAA Football, and Mortal Kombat compose the chain's five biggest sellers as digital sales surge in downbeat quarter.
GDC Europe 2011: Designer Neil Alphonso on why players didn't use Brink's parkour system and why its objective-based play was better received in Europe than in the US.
New maps and new abilities don't add much to the busy battlefields of Brink, but at least the price is right (for now).
An agent uses a weapon shield and a disguise to own on Founder's Tower map.
A player runs around the Labs map bonking enemies with a pointy object.
We scope out new abilities, including the field regen unit, pyro mine, micro UAV, tactical scanner, and napalm grenade.
Log in to comment