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Console Corner XBox:
Full-on Feng fighting furor

Tao Feng: Fist of the Lotus
Microsoft Games Studios

www.xbox.com/en-AU/taofeng/


Sim Tao Feng’s characters have almost 100 moves from throws through to head butts and broken glass is the tamest thing you’ll see.
Sim Tao Feng’s characters have almost 100 moves from throws through to head butts and broken glass is the tamest thing you’ll see.
Graphic from the web site
*
GAMES GRAB
We have a copy of
Tao Feng: Fist of the Lotus
(XBox)
up for grabs this edition.
Entries should be e-mailed to: ADFgamesmen@telstra.com
with the name of the game you would like to win in the subject line.
Please only one entry per person, subsequent entries will be discarded.
Include your full name and mailing address in the e-mail or your entry won’t be accepted.

Brutal is probably an understatement in describing Tao Feng. Unlike Microsoft stable mate Kung Fu Chaos, Tao Feng is not about humour or silliness.

Instead it is a vicious martial arts bloodfest that has players breaking their opponents limbs, leaving them bleeding like stuck pigs and with their clothes
(and features) torn to shreds - sound like your type of game?

It is a game that has won both critical acclaim and player acceptance (just check on how much a second-hand copy can sell for) since it’s release with its bold move on the fighting genre.

Tao Feng includes full interactive environments that allow you to throw opponents through walls, mash their face against floors or swing off a pole for a brutal kick to the head.

Game characters have almost 100 moves – from throws, kicks and punches through to nose breaking head butts and Streetfighter-inspired special moves to induce maximum damage.

Players earn Chi, a magical power, through successful attacks allowing them to enhance skills or repair their battered bodies before embarking on a new round.

It is a fast-paced, violent and ultimately enthralling game that stands as an example for the rest of its genre. It is also a good reason why consoles are no longer just kids toys. In the US it has a R rating, here it’s MA 15+.

Supporters hear the call
AM/FM Wallabies supporter radio

By CPL Mark Eaton

AM/FM Rugby World Cup radio
AM/FM Rugby World Cup radio
Photo: CPL Mark Eaton, 81WG, RAAF Base Williamtown

“Go the Wallabies!” I hear you shout. With Rugby World Cup fever in full swing you’re sure to want this palm-sized AM/FM radio to follow all the action and barrack for the home team over the next few weeks.

Emblazoned with the distinctive Wallabies logo in green and gold across the front and powered by two AAA batteries
(not supplied) the radio comes with a small set of headphones for privacy and a belt clip for mobility.

For the sports-history fanatics, the Rugby World Cup was conceived in 1983 and the first match played in 1987. It is the world’s third most popular and biggest sports event behind the Olympic Games and the FIFA World Cup.

This year Australia is hosting 20 teams for the World Cup from October 10 to November 22. The last World Cup, in 1999, was broadcast to more than 150 countries with a cumulative audience of more than three billion.

Even if you can’t get to a match this time around and share in the excitement and atmosphere of the Cup, at least this tiny radio makes a great gift or souvenir for the die-hard rugby fan.

If you’re quick you can pick up the radio and a large range of other Rugby World Cup accessories at Big W.

Prices start at $5.95 See www.bigw.com.au for current stock or www.rugby2003.com.au for more information on the game.

Go the Wallabies!

 

 

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