Two more of Nintendo's prized franchises make their Wii debuts.
"LittleBigPlanet" (Sony):
The gameplay looks delightful, but it remains to be seen what citizens of the PlayStation Network will do with the level-building tools here.
"Fallout 3" (Bethesda Softworks):
The long-awaited continuation of the post-apocalyptic role-playing series was the best-looking thing at last year's E3 trade show. If it's as good as Bethesda's "The Elder Scrolls IV: Oblivion," it will be a Game of the Year contender.
"No More Heroes" (Ubisoft):
Goichi Suda, creator of the ultraweird, ultraviolent "Killer 7," is the mad genius behind this surreal, stylish swordfighting adventure.
"Metal Gear Solid 4: Guns of the Patriots" (Konami):
Industry legend Hideo Kojima finally delivers the latest installment of his stealth-action epic.
"Professor Layton and the Curious Village" (Nintendo):
Level 5, the studio responsible for "Dragon Quest VIII," developed this collection of brainteasers.
"Culdcept Saga" (Namco Bandai):
Board game meets collectible card game in this follow-up to 2003's cult favorite "Culdcept."
"Grand Theft Auto IV" (Rockstar):
The freewheeling crime epic returns to annoy would-be censors and delight bloodthirsty gamers.
"The World Ends With You" (Square Enix):
Besides a great title, this RPG set in modern Tokyo has the "Kingdom Hearts" team behind it.
"Spore" (Electronic Arts):
"The Sims" creator Will Wright simulates the entire history of the universe. PC gamers get first crack, though Wright has promised a Wii version.
"Lost Odyssey" (Microsoft):
"Final Fantasy" veteran Hironobu Sakaguchi presents his second Xbox 360 role-playing game, which I hope will improve upon 2007's "Blue Dragon."
"Dead Space" (Electronic Arts):
Think "Alien," think "Pitch Black" as an engineer stumbles across an alien infestation ... in space!
"Tom Clancy's EndWar" (Ubisoft):
The Clancy brand name could persuade console players to give real-time strategy games a shot.
"Brutal Legend" (Sierra):
Jack Black stars in this heavy metal odyssey from "Psychonauts" mastermind Tim Schafer.
I stole the descriptions from today's Chicago Tribune. :)
I got depressed when I heard people argue that 2008 would be better than 2007, now I am very intrigued. Plus nice variety for everyone maybe. :)
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