Unordered List

Tuesday, 6 August 2013

Alienware M17x full HD 3D gaming laptop:

Alienware M17x full HD 3D gaming laptop:

  Available with Windows 8 – designed for a smooth, versatile PC experience 
Alienware M17x R4

Immersive gaming anywhere you go.

The Alienware™ M17x is the next step in gaming evolution, featuring a powerful new chipset, advanced graphics options and an optional 3D screen for an immersive gaming experience that you can pack up and take with you.
  • 3D capability puts you in the middle of the action
You can be totally surrounded and love every minute of it, when you choose to upgrade to an incredible stereoscopic 3D Full HD 17.3" 120Hz WLED LCD display.
  • Move fast, travel light
Alienware has never offered a more powerful laptop under 10 lb.3 You can spend less time searching for a plug and more time gaming.
Alienware M17x R4

Experience total versatility

Enjoy your games and movies however you like with the Alienware™ M17x. Whether you connect to your TV or home theater, or take advantage of the 17" WLED and awesome audio options, the Alienware M17x provides pure entertainment.
  • Speed and performance to get the job done.
Play your games the way they should be played. The Alienware M17x offers 3rd Generation Intel® Core™ i7 processors, optional RAID configurations and high-speed mSATA caching drives for high-performance gaming.
 
  • Go big with your entertainment.
Enjoy your games and movies in a big way. Connect your Alienware M17x to an external screen and be rocked by killer 7.1 surround audio for an awesome entertainment experience. 
  • The theater you can take with you.
Experience your entertainment on the Alienware M17x’s LCD display by using the HDMI®-In port to connect an external HDMI-enabled game console, Blu-ray player or other device. It’s all matched by high-quality audio provided by integrated Klipsch®-certified speakers.
Alienware-m17x-r4

Take command of your game domain.

Alienware™ Command Center software features a powerful suite of customization options to make your Alienware M17x your own. Don’t just play a game. Play YOUR game.
  • AlienAdrenaline
The new AlienAdrenaline feature enables Game Mode, which lets you assign a unique profile to each game on your system. Disable unnecessary programs and activate your music player when you launch one game, or bring up key web links when you launch another.
  • AlienFX™
AlienFX System Lighting Technology gives you access to a variety of themes and up to 512 billion distinct lighting combinations, so you can personalize as much as you like. Complete your immersion by customizing your system with themes that respond to in-game events with unique lighting effects.
  • AlienFusion
AlienFusion power management controls enable you to configure your settings to maximize performance and efficiency while managing power usage. Crank up the settings for hardcore gaming and resource-intensive tasks, or scale back when you just need to run everyday programs.
  • AlienTouch™
Customize your touchpad’s sensitivity to prevent accidental contact, and activate virtual scrolling to enable vertical and horizontal scrolling with just a touch.
Alienware M17x R4

Victory through superior engineering

Winning is just the beginning. Go for total domination with the impeccably engineered Alienware M17x to ensure personal glory on the field of battle.
  • Your name will be remembered.
The Alienware M17x is available in nebula red and stealth black to suit your personal style. And with a customized laser-etched metal nameplate secured to the bottom of your system, future generations will know of your victories and remember you in song and legend.
  • Get connected.
Connect your entertainment devices and peripherals with a variety of ports, including USB 3.0, HDMI® and HDMI-In, and a 9-in-1 media card reader.
 
  • Good design is a beautiful thing.
Effective design ensures gaming comfort and style, while laptop portability enables total freedom.

Complete your Alienware M17x experience.

Your Alienware™ M17x is just the start. When you buy from Dell™, you can get much more than just a gaming laptop. You can customize an experience that's just right for you.
Alienware M17x R4Round out your system purchase: At Alienware.com, you'll find a vast arsenal of Alienware™ TactX accessories designed to enhance your gaming experience. Pack it all up in a specially designed Orion bag and be ready to face all challenges.
Alienware M17x R4Alienware Gaming Services: Get help configuring your system for maximum game performance and resolving compatibility issues. Choose from our menu of no-hassle services so you can get started fast and keep on playing.

Crysis 3 for PS3, Xbox 360, and PC

Review: Crysis 3 is like a bad date at an extremely fancy restaurant







Crysis 3 You've made the reservations. You've both dressed up: business casual, let's call it, with a modicum of hair-styling, makeup, and your second-fanciest pairs of shoes. The menu is beyond enticing, never mind that it's presented in a leather folder, bound with gilded rope. The chandeliers sparkle, seeming to sway gently overhead, as a band plays exactly the right music at exactly the right volume. And hey, look at that! The food is stupendous! It nearly even vindicates its obscene price, which you were at first certain was markup for the textiled walls and imported carpets. But as you get into your car to drive home, you reflect: something just didn't feel right. It was a bad date, and despite the food, the decor, the ambience, you're probably not going to call each other for a follow-up.
Such is Crysis 3 -- a conflicted little package wrapped in extremely pretty paper. So conflicting, in fact, that it's hard to know where to begin...
So let's start here: it truly is the year of the bow. Before Lara Croft tries her hand at a bow and arrow, Prophet sports it in Crysis 3. The third main installment (fourth game) is set 24 years after the events of Crysis 2 in a New York overgrown with plantlife. Playing as Prophet, you use the Nanosuit -- outfitted with a combination of human and alien technology -- to uncover a mysterious power source being used by CELL. It's in the urban jungle that you'll use all of the Nanosuit's capabilities to battle CELL and the Ceph.
Let's start off where everyone goes when they think of Crysis -- the visuals. Having reviewed Crysis 3 on the Xbox 360, I can easily say that a new console generation would do wonders for this game. I have no doubt that the graphics will melt faces on high-end PCs, but on the Xbox 360, it merely makes your face sweat a bit. The urban jungle of New York is a sight to behold,but it's just not where it should be; once you take in the environment for a few minutes, you'll cease being impressed. That being said, the facial animations of the characters are amazing. Psycho, in particular, has some of the most impressive facial animations and rendering that I've seen this console generation.
Unfortunately, the visuals are just make-up, covering up the the numerous flaws that plague Crysis 3. Let's start with the combat. The Nanosuit provides a wealth of possibilities on how to approach every scenario. Whether you want to activate armor mode and engage in a firefight with some invulnerability, or you'd rather activate stealth and be a silent killer, you have options. Choosing Nanosuit upgrade load-outs -- such as longer sprinting and assassinations not taking you out of stealth -- adds even more variety. Then, you're able to reconfigure weapons on-the-go, adding from a buffet table of sights, grips, fire modes and other attachments. 
crysis 3
The crowning achievement of Crysis 3 is the bow. The bow is both the best and worst part about Crysis 3. It's undoubtedly the best weapon in the game, and it taunts you into playing the game entirely from stealth. You see, normally when you fire a weapon from stealth or engage in melee, you break out of stealth for a short duration. The bow does away with that. You can fire and kill an enemy from stealth with the bow and never worry about being seen. Also, shots from the bow are almost always a one-hit kill. You only have a certain number of arrows available to you, but simply turn on your visor, see where your arrows are, and pick them back up again. It's basically an unlimited supply of ammo for an overpowered weapon. Now, you can still play the game balls-to-the-wall with guns blazing, but things are so much easier with the bow.
I went through 90 percent of the game without ever using the Nanosuit's armor ability. I primarily snuck around in stealth, assassinating enemies with either melee executions or swift shots from the bow. It was my choice to play that way, but it was also the most logical one. It's so easy that it does away with any strategy involving the Nanosuit. Simply put, there's no reason to ever use anything other than stealth and the bow. It wasn't until the last hour or two of the game that I started using other abilities and weapons. That said, you will feel like a badass the entire time you use the bow.
Level design was yet another flaw that plagued the game. When you see the sprawling urban jungle environment, you'll undoubtedly feel the strong urge to explore. However, you'll find that there's not much to see. You can go off on your own, to a certain extent, but there's never really anything to see or do. You'll get the feeling of an open-world, but you're stuck in a linear map that seeks to deceive you. There's little reason to diverge from a straight path to a waypoint. Combined with some poor AI and the bow, the levels offer little challenge. Sometimes you'll have to ascend a building, sneaking around in stealth and picking off enemies with concise shots. And what of those other enemies roaming around? Just wait for them to head towards the body of one of their deceased allies and you'll easily dispose of them, as well. It's straightforward with little freedom that feels wasted considering the scope of what Crytek could've done with these missions and maps.
crysis 3
By far one of the biggest letdowns was the story -- boy is it forced. I'm part of the group that's never been impressed with Crysis' story to begin with; it's definitely not the game's strong point. Killing is the strong point, but it's hard to ignore the shortcomings of Crysis 3's story. You never get the sense of intensity, regardless of how hard the writing, action sequences and voice acting tries. I've just seen it all before. You'll be able to predict what's going to happen two missions before it happens. I never want to be bored in a sci-fi shooter that's supposed to be full of action, but I felt lifeless playing through the Crysis 3 campaign.
Crysis 3 comes with the standard multiplayer fare that's found in all modern shooters these days. What sets Crysis 3's multiplayer apart from the rest are the Nanosuit abilities. Watching two squads of stealthed super soldiers engaging each other adds tension and makes for some exciting kills. The maps offer some diverse ways to get around. Why go through hallways to get to the enemy sniper when I can jump off the peir, travel underwater between huge cargo ships, and climb up the rear of a boat to surprise him from behind? 
There's not a lot of creativity from the modes, though, as you've seen it all in other shooters. Hunter mode is the one that stands out the most. In Hunter mode, two players are assigned as the Hunters, equipped with permanently cloaked Nanosuits and wielding bows. Their objective is to kill the other players (Troopers). Every time a Hunter kills a Trooper, that Trooper becomes a Hunter. They grow in numbers until only one Trooper is left, fighting for his life. It does help, a tiny bit, that Troopers can deploy Nanosuit jammers to see cloaked Hunters. If you're thinking it's kind of like Flood mode from Halo 4, it's because it is. Regardless, it's a ton of fun.
Fans of the Crysis series will enjoy Crysis 3, but for someone with no allegiance to the franchise, it doesn't offer anything not already available in other games. The graphics are excellent at times, but other times they'll leave you unimpressed. Compared to a game like Halo 4, you'll wonder why Crysis is lauded for its visual  achievements. The controls are tight for responsive combat, but there's never much of a reason to play with anything other than stealth and the bow. And the levels come off as a large, pretty mansion with tons of wasted space. It's like all of those rooms in Wayne Manor where there's nothing to see. You're left thinking, 'Wow, I should be able to do something over here.' When a level gets it right, like the dam level, Crysis 3 is a bloody good time, but most of the game will have you burying arrows into enemies in-between yawns.