home > search >
GamesFirst! Online since 1995
previous :: 1 2

Keywords: Sort by: Look in:
Check box to search full phrase only.


Not finding what you need? Check the really old stuff using Google!

Google
 
Web GamesFirst.com


Search for 'network' returned 29 results.

Interview: Adam Mateljan, CEO TerraForge
interview | 08/03/03 | Shawn Rider
GF! has the scoop on some of the most intriguing new technology we\'ve seen in awhile. TerraForge is a young company, but they have big plans to revolutionize gaming. With their trifecta of technologies--the Asgard Gaming Community, ODIN Game Network, and Valhalla Game Engine--they plan on bringing multiplatfom interoperability into the mainstream. Start a game on your PS2, save it, head to work and load it up on your PDA, save it again, then resume your game over lunch break on your PC. Our interview with TerraForge CEO Adam Mateljan should get you good and interested. Click here for the interview.
click here for more

Megaman Network Transmission Review
game: Megaman Network Transmission
review | 07/20/03 | Eric Qualls
Capcom doses us again with the Mega Man goodness, and we wish we loved it more. Mega Man Network Transmission returns to its 2D roots to commemorate the 15th anniversary of our little blue hero, but a variety of things keep this from being our retro hit of the summer.
click here for more

Mega Man Battle Network White Review
game: Mega Man Battle Network White
review | 07/20/03 | Eric Qualls
Mega Man returns to your GBA in Mega Man Battle Network White. This is one half of a pair of titles that offer more of the Battle Network card collecting and net surfing action you\'ve come to love (or not).
click here for more

Mega Man Network Transmission
game: Mega Man Network Transmission
review | 07/20/03 | GF! Back Catalogue 10/2004 => 1995
Capcom doses us again with the Mega Man goodness, and we wish we loved it more. Mega Man Network Transmission returns to its 2D roots to commemorate the 15th anniversary of our little blue hero, but a variety of things keep this from being our retro hit of the summer. Get more about it right here.

click here for more

Mega Man Battle Network 3: White
game: Mega Man Battle Network 3: White
review | 07/20/03 | GF! Back Catalogue 10/2004 => 1995
Mega Man returns to your GBA in Mega Man Battle Network White. This is one half of a pair of titles that offer more of the Battle Network card collecting and net surfing action you've come to love (or not). Check the review here.
click here for more

D-Link DI-604 Ethernet Broadband Router Review
game: D-Link DI-604 Ethernet Broadband Router
review | 05/22/03 | Shawn Rider
We\'re firm believers in the D-Link tradition of high quality network hardware at good prices. The DI-604 is a phenomenal unit, and it\'s even approved by Microsoft for use with the Xbox. That means this bad boy will have you online gaming and keeping your home LAN secure for ages to come. Get the whole review right here.
click here for more

INTERVIEW - Niel Wiser, President & Founder of UltraPrime Network
Articles Archive | 01/19/03 | GF! Back Catalogue 10/2004 => 1995
The Evolvers: A well selected name for what could constitute an entirely new perspective on massively multiplayer gaming. For years there have been videogames that have attempted to mimic the look and feel of Hollywood: vampire slayers, star trekkers, bounty hunters “ slews of voice actors trying to mimic other people in the name of a good videogame. It's amazing how rarely they succeed. Similarly, there are times when storylines built with the controls of a console or played out on the screen of the PC are used to produce a feature film. Resident Evil. Final Fantasy.
click here for more

Ripping Friends Review
game: Ripping Friends
review | 12/22/02 | GF! Back Catalogue 10/2004 => 1995
John K\'s latest abomination is Ripping Friends, showing on Cartoon Network\'s Adult Swim. It\'s not a good cartoon: The titular friends are just grotesque Tick wannabes and it all feels like the boring parts of Ren and Stimpy rehashed. But that\'s a lot better than the game... Click here.
click here for more

D-Link Wireless Access Point and Ethernet Bridge Reviews
review | 12/16/02 | Shawn Rider
See that thing at right? That\'s the new D-Link DWL 810 Ethernet to Wireless Bridge, and that\'s the thing you can use to hook your Xbox, PS2, or Gamecube into a wireless broadband network for online gameplay. Pretty sweet, huh? But you have a wired network at home, right? No worries -- pick up the D-Link DWL-900AP+ Wireless Access Point to turn your home network into WiFi paradise. Click here for the DWL 810. Here for the 900AP+.
click here for more

Mega Man Battle Network 2 Review
game: Mega Man Battle Network 2
review | 08/20/02 | GF! Back Catalogue 10/2004 => 1995
Capcom\'s venerable Mega Man returns for his second spin in a GBA RPG. Mega Man Battle Network 2 puts you in the shoes of LAN, an average boy who just happens to use a virtual Mega Man to keep the Net safe from evildoers. Click here.
click here for more

Sony Takes It Online
Articles Archive | 05/21/01 | GF! Back Catalogue 10/2004 => 1995
Sony announced several new partnerships and technology deals at E3, making a major play to enter the online gaming market before Microsoft can get its online bits in order. Both companies have professed the importance of online gaming to the success of console systems, and Sony has specifically illuminated desires to create an online distribution network for all kinds of gaming, movies, music, and other broadband entertainment applications.

click here for more

Sega Announces New Strategy
Articles Archive | 01/31/01 | GF! Back Catalogue 10/2004 => 1995
Peter Moore, President and Chief Operating Officer for Sega of America, held a press teleconference this morning to detail Sega of America's plans for 2001 and to comment on Sega's worldwide strategy. In addition to announcing a new $99 price tag for Dreamcast beginning February 4 (the Sega Smash Pack will now be priced at $119), the company has decided on some strategies to move Sega from a lagging hardware manufacturer, to a "top of the heap" software developer and publisher. Moore outlined a three-pronged approach that will go into effect April 1 this year and continue through at least March of 2002. The basic approach involves the following:

Sega is now a "platform agnostic" third-party game developer/publisher.
Sega will license the DC chipset.
Sega will focus on network strengths.
click here for more

EDITORIAL - The Plight of Dreamcast Networking in Third-World-Net Cities
Articles Archive | 01/01/00 | GF! Back Catalogue 10/2004 => 1995
Obviously, the internet capabilities of the Dreamcast”combined with its superior processor apparatus”give it an edge far sharper than any system to break in the last forever many years. You thought, perhaps, that you had maximized the possibilities of your couch when you finally found the Dukes of Hazzard TV tray you had been looking for the last ten years, or installed the Molson-stocked mini-fridge next to your remote control caddy. But now, Sega has introduced the possibility of leisurely strolling through the internet from that selfsame couch, not to mention given you the option to play console games on-line with friends who are similarly devoted to their domestic sitting arrangements.
click here for more

Sega Takes it Online
Articles Archive | 01/01/00 | GF! Back Catalogue 10/2004 => 1995
One of the promises of the Dreamcast was Internet connectivity right out of the box. Sega realized early on that consumers not only want to game online, but to have easy access to web sites, email, and the plethora of applications that have made the Internet and the World Wide Web so attractive. Indeed, right out of the box users could plug their new Dreamcast into the wall and get online with a few quick clicks. While the Dreamcast Web Browser 1.0 wasn't fully functional on the contemporary network, everything worked pretty well. Within a short time you could download mods for Sonic Adventure, check out the questionable content provided by IGN, kings of the misguided headline, and, most importantly, access the external web and email. Odds are, some of you are reading this article on your Dreamcast right now, so you know what I mean. Hopefully you're using the 2.0 browser, which now supports Flash and MP3s.
click here for more

Search Hints

 

 

 

 

 

 

Candid and thoughtful.