Thursday, January 5, 2012
ZOMBIELAND
A shy student trying to reach his family in Ohio, and a gun-toting tough guy trying to find the Last Twinkie and a pair of sisters trying to get to an amusement park join forces to travel across a zombie-filled America.
WATCH FULL MOVIE, HERE ON DEADRISING!!!
Sunday, December 25, 2011
Resident Evil - History

The survival horror video game Resident Evil made its debut on the PlayStation in 1996, and was later ported to the Sega Saturn. It was a critical and commercial success, leading to the production of two sequels, Resident Evil 2 in 1998 and Resident Evil 3: Nemesis in 1999, both for the PlayStation. A port of Resident Evil 2 was released for the Nintendo 64. In addition, ports of all three were released forWindows. The fourth game in the series, Resident Evil Code: Veronica, was developed for the Sega Dreamcast and released in 2000, followed by ports of 2 and 3. Resident Evil Code: Veronica was later re-released for Dreamcast in Japan in an updated form as Code: Veronica Complete, which included slight changes, many of which revolved around story cutscenes. This updated version was later ported to PlayStation 2 and Nintendo GameCube under the title Code: Veronica X.
Despite earlier announcements that the next game in the series would be
released for the PlayStation 2, which resulted in the creation of an unrelated
game titled Devil May Cry, series' creator and producer Shinji Mikami decided
to make the series exclusively for the Nintendo GameCube. The next three games
in the series—a remake of the original Resident Evil and the prequel Resident Evil Zero, both
released in 2002, as well as Resident Evil 4—were all released initially as
GameCube exclusives. Resident
Evil 4 was later released for
Windows, PS2 and Wii. In
addition, the GameCube received ports of the previous Resident Evil sequels. Despite this exclusivity
agreement between Capcom and Nintendo, Capcom released several Resident Evil titles for the PS2 that were not
considered direct sequels.
A trilogy of GunCon-compatible light gun games
known as the Gun Survivor series featured first person game
play. The first, Resident Evil Survivor, was
released in 2000 for the PlayStation and PC, but received mediocre reviews. The
subsequent games, Resident Evil
Survivor 2 Code: Veronica and Resident
Evil: Dead Aim, fared somewhat better. Dead Aim is actually the fourth Gun Survivor game in Japan, with Gun Survivor 3 being the Dino Crisis spin-off Dino Stalker. In a
similar vein, the Chronicles series features first person game
play, albeit on an on-rails path. Resident
Evil: The Umbrella Chronicles was
released in 2007 for the Wii, with a
follow up, Resident
Evil: The Darkside Chronicles released
in 2009.
Resident Evil Outbreak is an online game for the
PS2, released in 2003, depicting a series of episodic storylines in Raccoon City set
during the same time period as Resident
Evil 2 and 3. It was followed by a sequel, Resident Evil
Outbreak File #2. Raccoon City is a fictional
metropolis located in the Arklay Mountains of North America that succumbed to the
deadly T-Virus outbreak and was consequently destroyed via a nuclear missile
attack issued by the United States government. The town served a critical
junction for the series' progression as one of the main catalysts to Umbrella's
downfall as well as the entry point for some of the series' most notable
characters.
Resident Evil Gaiden is an action-adventure game for the Game Boy Color featuring
an RPG-style
combat system. There have also been several downloadable mobile games based on
the Resident Evil series in Japan. Some of these mobile
games have been released in North America and Europe through T-Mobile.
Saturday, December 24, 2011
Tribute to The Walking Dead
The Walking Dead tells the adventures and misadventures of a group of
people trying to survive after a zombie apocalypse. The Walking Dead
tells how Rick Grimes, an American from Kentucky police wakes from a
coma after an accident in the line of duty, to meet a world torn bodies
of fresh and eager, not knowing who has passed around, goes in search of
his family. With the passage of the publications is seen as a more
seasoned Rick joins is finding survivors in search of a place to settle
and be safe or at least able to cope with the zombie threat that stalks
them.
Zombie Warfare
Survive the onslaught of zombies for as long can. There are 30 waves in
total and 2 bosses. Buy upgrades, items, and new weapons along the way
to help you stay alive. Use the mouse to aim and shoot, Arrows or AWSD
keys to move, Number Keys (1-5) to change weapons, space to activate
rage, P to pause and access options
Boxhead The Zombie Wars
The Boxhead series of flash games is constantly improving and evolving. The latest version, Boxhead: The Zombie Wars, is most definitely the best yet. The gameplay in Zombie Wars goes back outside to fight a zombie army. You get your trusty pistol and usefull shot gun that were in the previous versions, plus lots of cool new weapons and equipment. You have the ability to build a base with turrets and barracades. Play the game below, Boxhead The Zombie Wars is a top flash game you don't want to miss.
Find more free online flash games at Fupa.com
Zombie Pop Culture
The figure of the zombie has appeared several times in fantasy themed fiction and entertainment, as early as the 1929 novel The Magic Island by William Seabrook. Time claimed that the book "introduced 'zombi' into U.S. speech". In 1932, Victor Halperin directed White Zombie, a horror film starring Bela Lugosi.
This film, capitalizing on the same voodoo zombie themes as Seabrook's book of three years prior, is often regarded as the first legitimate zombie film ever made, and introduced the word "zombie" to the wider world. Other zombie-themed films include Val Lewton's I Walked With a Zombie (1943) and Wes Craven's The Serpent and the Rainbow, (1988) a heavily fictionalized account of Wade Davis' book.
A new version of the zombie, distinct from that described in Haitian religion, has also emerged in popular culture in recent decades.
This "zombie" is taken largely from George A. Romero's seminal film The Night of the Living Dead, which was in turn partly inspired by Richard Matheson's 1954 novel I Am Legend. The word zombie is not used in Night of the Living Dead itself, but was applied later by fans. The monsters in the film and its sequels, such as Dawn of the Dead and Day of the Dead, as well as its many inspired works, such as Return of the Living Dead and Zombie Flesh Eaters, are usually hungry for human flesh although Return of the Living Dead introduced the popular concept of zombies eating brains. Sometimes they are victims of a fictional pandemic illness causing the dead to reanimate or the living to behave this way, but often no cause is given in the story.
Although this modern monster bears some superficial resemblance to the Haitian zombie tradition, its links to such folklore are unclear and many consider George A. Romero to be the progenitor of this creature. Zombie fiction is now a sizeable sub-genre of horror, usually describing a breakdown of civilization occurring when most of the population become flesh-eating zombies – a zombie apocalypse.
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