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Friday, 14 March 2014

Call of Duty 4 Modern Warfare Preview and Download

  Call of Duty 4 Modern Warfare Download


The game rating

Parents need to know that although earlier games in the Call of Duty series had "Teen" ratings, this game is rated "Mature" for portraying highly authentic modern military combat with realistic gore. There are distressing situations involving torture, execution, and the gruesome deaths of primary protagonists to whom the player will likely have grown attached. This material is more intense and disturbing than in earlier games of this series, and a diverse selection of cuss words is clearly audible. This game can be played with others online, which Common Sense Media doesn't recommend for anyone under the age of 12.

The award won by this game

       

This game had won The Best Action game of  2007



The game category

Call of duty 4 Modern Warfare is A  first person shooting game relating to the previous
version of call of duty modern warfare serious

The Positives from Critics
                                     
As Call of Duty 4: Modern Warfare's single player campaign unfolds, the player is introduced to new game play at every turn – one moment you are fast-roping from your Black Hawk helicopter after storming into the war zone with an armada of choppers, the next you are a sniper, under…

Game Informer:-            Start to finish, online or off, Call of Duty 4 is solid gold. Some might decry the single-                                                        player’s  short length or that it’s more of the same, but its amazing quality and the                                                            Arcade mode...more than make up for it. Infinity Ward has delivered on every front,                                                      and there is no question in my mind that this is the best action shooter that I have                                                            ever played.
GamingExellence:-      As far as first-person shooters go, this is one of the best on the market, and is                                                                          something anyone that’s sure to interest anyone who has dabbled in the genre
YouGamers:-                Call of Duty 4 is a great online shooter, and welcome competition to both Counter-                                                             Strike: Source and Battlefield 2. The single player campaign is everything you can                                                           expect from a Call of Duty game and then some.

Review
   
The only real catch is that the single-player is almost shockingly short. If you've been keeping up with this style of game, you'll probably shoot your way to the credits in under five hours. While you can raise the difficulty to give yourself more of a challenge, the main thing this does is make the enemies frustratingly deadly, which sort of detracts from the fun.

While it may have a lack of single-player quantity, it makes up for most of it with its quality. The game tells its story from multiple perspectives, and you'll play as a new British SAS operative as well as a US Marine. The campaign takes you from a rainy night out at sea on a boat that's in the process of sinking to a missile silo where it's on you to save millions from an unsavory nuclear-powered death. Along the way, there are plenty of jaw-dropping moments where you'll look around the room for someone to whom you can say, "I can't believe that just happened." In a world filled with war games in which the good guys come out unscathed and the world is left at total peace, Call of Duty 4 will wake you up like a face full of ice water.

The action in the campaign is usually very straightforward. You have a compass at the bottom of your screen, and the direction of your current objective is very plainly marked. But getting from point A to point B is never as simple as running in a straight line, as you'll be conducting full-scale assaults in Middle Eastern countries by moving from house to house, taking out what seems like a never-ending stream of enemy troops along the way. You'll also get an opportunity to raid Russian farmhouses in search of terrorist leaders, disguise yourself as the enemy, and, in one sequence, don a brushlike ghillie suit and crawl through the brush as enemy troops and tanks roll right past you. It's a breathtaking moment in a campaign filled with breathtaking moments. Unfortunately, it's about half as long as the average shooter, and there are plenty of sequences where you wish there were just one or two more hills to take.
Of course, if you're looking for longevity, that's where the multiplayer comes in. Up to 18 players can get online and get into a match on one of 16 different maps. Many of the levels are taken from portions of the single-player and they offer a healthy mix of wide-open, sniper-friendly areas and tight, almost cramped spaces where grenades and shotguns are the order of the day. There are six game modes to choose from. The old standby is team deathmatch, though you can also play in a free-for-all deathmatch, which isn't as much fun as the team modes. The other modes are more objective-oriented, and a couple of those have you lugging bombs across the map to blow up enemy equipment, or preventing the enemy from blowing up your base. Others have you capturing control points. Lastly, you can change up the game rules a bit with a hardcore setting that makes weapons more realistically damaging or an old-school mode that puts weapons on the ground as pickups and generally moves away from the
simulation side of things.



In addition to just firing your weapon or tossing grenades, you earn some more interesting tactical moves for skilled play. If you can shoot three opponents without dying, you're able to call in a UAV drone, which basically is an upgraded radar that makes enemy positions show up on your onscreen map for 30 seconds at any time. Normally, enemies blip up onto the map only if they fire their weapon to make their location known. If you can go on a five-kill streak, you can call in an air strike, which brings up a shot of the entire level map and lets you place the air strike wherever you like. When combined with a UAV sweep, this can be really devastating. If you can make it all the way to seven kills--which is actually easier than it sounds--you can call in a helicopter for support. It'll buzz around the map and automatically open fire on enemies, though enemies can shoot it down, too. These additions to the normal first-person shooter gameplay really open up the game a lot and make it superexciting to play
You'll also always have something to work toward, regardless of mode, because in standard, public matches, you earn experience points for just about everything you do. Capturing control points, getting kills, calling in support, all of these things give you points that go toward your rank. Ranking up unlocks most of the game's multiplayer content.

The class system in Call of Duty 4 is also very interesting. Each class has a different weapon loadout and different traits, called perks. As you rank up, you eventually unlock all five of the preset classes and the ability to create your own class. This lets you pick your own main weapon, your sidearm, attachments for both weapons, what sort of special grenades you want to carry, and three perks. The perks are broken up into three groups to help keep things balanced, and as you continue to level, you'll unlock additional perks. These class traits are one of the game's neatest tricks and, again, really helps to set COD 4 apart from the pack.
Perks in the Perk 1 group are more focused on explosives, letting you get more flashbangs if you like, or letting you lug around a rocket launcher, which is great for taking out enemy choppers. The other two perk groups have traits like juggernaut, which increases your health. There's also last stand, which activates when you are killed by dropping you to the ground and switching you to a pistol, giving you a moment to kill the guy who took you out before he realizes you're still squirming around and finishes the job. Our current favorite is martyrdom, which causes you to drop a live grenade when killed. It adds a healthy dose of mayhem to the proceedings. The perks and other unlockables feel nicely balanced, too, so you probably won't run into situations where one class is just better than the other. As it should be, your ability to point the red dot at the head of your enemy and squeeze the trigger before he does the same is still the deciding factor
While there are a ton of compelling gameplay reasons to play Call of Duty 4, it also has top-notch presentation. The graphics are fantastic throughout, and they do a great job of rendering wide-open fields, tight buildings or houses, smoke-belching silos, and lots more. Some of the multiplayer maps look like they've already seen a lot of action, with blast craters, destroyed tanks, and other things that you can hide in or behind. It also has terrific lighting, so everything looks as it should. Everything sounds right, too. When you hear a battle raging in the distance, it sounds appropriately muffled, and up close, the crack of an M16 or the full-auto barrage from an AK-47 are appropriately loud and angry sounding. There is also quite a bit of voice work throughout the game, and it's all nicely done. The music, for the most part, is the typical sort of action-movie music you've come to expect from a first-person shooter, except for a rap over the end credits that seems to simultaneously detail the game's story while also acting as a subliminal diss record with some slick talk about how this is the third chapter by Infinity Ward, perhaps lightly inferring that you should ignore Treyarch's contribution to the series, Call of Duty 3. It's great.
COD 4 is available on the PlayStation 3, Xbox 360, and PC, and each version holds up admirably. The differences between the two console versions feel mostly negligible. Both systems deliver good frame rates and have good, easy-to-use multiplayer setups that most closely resemble Halo 2 and 3's party system and matchmaking playlists. The PC version of the game uses a more traditional server browser to get you into games. Both systems work just fine on their respective platforms. The PC version has the ability to run in a higher resolution, if you're equipped with a PC that can handle it, but it seems to scale quite well. You can also create servers that allow up to 32 players to play at once on the PC, as opposed to a limit of 18 in the console versions, but given the size of the multiplayer maps, putting 32 players in them makes things a little too crowded. Despite listing 1080p support on the back of the box, COD 4 appears to prefer 720p on the PlayStation 3. The only way to get it to run in 1080p is to tell your PS3 that your TV doesn't support 720p or 1080i, but the difference seems minor. Either way, you'd be hard-pressed to tell it apart from its Xbox 360 counterpart. And all versions control just fine, making the decision over which version to buy totally dependent on which controller you like the most.
It's a shame that the single-player is so brief, but you should only skip out on Call of Duty 4 if you're the sort of person who doesn't appreciate great first-person shooter multiplayer. The quality of the content in the campaign is totally top-shelf, and the multiplayer is some of the best around, making this a truly superb package

Recommended system requirement 


CPU:-   2.4 GHz dual core or better is recommended

RAM:-  1GB (2GB for windows vista)

VGA:-   3.0 shader support recommended. Nividia Geforce                 7800  better or ATI radeon X1800 or better

DX :-     Direct X 9.0c

OS :-     Windows XP/ Vista only

HDD:-    8 GB of uncompressed free hard disk space (plus                 600mb for windows swap file)

ODD:-    6x DVD-ROM


Minimum system requirement



CPU:- Pentium 42.4 GHz / Athlon 64 2800+ (Intel                             and Athlon 1.8 GHz Dual Core or better supported

RAM:- 512 MB RAM(786 for vista

VGA:- 128 MB Hardware accelerated required- 100% Direct             X 9.0c compatible and latest drivers (NVIDIA Geforce             6600+ / ATI  Radeon 9800 PRO+)


TO DOWNLOAD 
       
      (firstly you must need an g mail account.) 
        just click Here To Download the game. You will be sent to               an Google account conformation page just your g mail address         and password and you will be again sent to the Google drive             page select the rar file and Click the right mouse button and             the download option 

                            click here to download










Tuesday, 11 March 2014

Hitman 2 Silent assassin

                     Hitman 2 silent assassin 

           


This game is all about the stealth mode.  Hitman 2, released simultaneously for the PC, Xbox, and PlayStation 2 platforms, is the sequel to a PC game released two years ago by Denmark-based developer IO Interactive. The original Hitman: Code name 47 featured some undeniably impressive technical elements, but it also had a number of serious problems. Some players were able to overcome the control issues and punishing difficulty level of the game and appreciated it on the strength of its violent concept--you played as a genetically engineered contract killer and were tasked with stealthily eliminating a number of well-guarded targets. At its best, the game offered both full-on intense action as well as plenty of nail-biting suspense. The sequel takes this same idea a step further and fully realizes it, proving that IO Interactive has the ability to back up flashy graphics and controversial subject matter with great game play. Simply put, Hitman 2 fixes virtually all of the problems of its predecessor and  stands tall on its own merits as an outstanding action game.

                                     


           Those who never played the original Hitman already know all the background on Hitman 2 that they'll really need. The game begins with the enigmatic man known only as 47 working not as a hired gun but as a gardener. He's given up his violent ways and is now serving as a humble groundskeeper in a Sicilian church. But when the church's kindly minister is kidnapped, 47 has no choice but to once again don his black suit and unpack his deadly arsenal of firearms and close-range weapons. He contacts his former employer to try to track down the priest, but he'll need to perform a few jobs before they'll cough up any details on his friend's whereabouts. So much for early retirement. Yet though the story unfolds vividly using beautifully staged cinematic cutscenes rendered using the game's 3D engine, the actual story of Hitman 2 doesn't really get too far off the ground. It's largely an excuse to send 47 around the world to exotic locations like Japan, Russia, Malaysia, and India, where you'll help him infiltrate heavily fortified locations from an ancient castle to a high-tech software corporation
The game comprises more than 20 missions in all, which you'll play through one after the other. Though the settings and the details of each mission are different, most all of them share some basic themes: getting in, eliminating a key target, and getting out. How you meet your objective is up to you, whether by guile and stealth or by brute force, and most missions are cleverly designed to have at least several viable, even intuitive solutions. If you're really good, you can make it through most missions leaving only a single corpse behind--the only one that matters--and you can make it through having never even drawn a firearm. If that's too subtle for you, you can opt to try to mow down anyone who stands between you and your victim. But you'll need to be careful, because your primary target might flee the scene amid whatever turmoil you cause.
Actually, one of the big differences between Hitman 2 and its predecessor is that, for various reasons, a forceful approach is much more viable in the sequel. At the normal difficulty setting, it's in fact much easier, and much faster, to just blast your way through most missions, partly because your enemies just aren't that smart in a shootout, though they can overwhelm you in numbers. Nevertheless, the game still encourages you to be stealthy, and you'll have to be at the game's two higher difficulty settings. Regardless of how you play, the fact that you can just start shooting if you blow your cover will lead to many thrilling, unscripted gunfights against large groups of foes that look realistic and often act realistically too.
As 47, you have access to the sorts of moves and weaponry that you'd perhaps expect from a character of his nature. You'll get to see 47 ply his deadly trade from a default third-person perspective, though the developers added an optional first-person view as well. That's a nice touch, but still, it's hard to pass up the third-person option, since it gives you a clear look at all of 47's lifelike animations and gives you some good peripheral vision too. While 47 has no hand-to-hand combat moves, he can take out foes at close range by slashing their throats in one quick motion, strangling them with his trusty fiber wire, or knocking them out with chloroform--an uncharacteristically humane addition to 47's arsenal. Melee weapons ranging from a golf club to a katana are also available, as well as a massive variety of real-world firearms. All manner of pistols, shotguns, sub-machine guns, assault rifles, and sniper rifles can be found and used, and as you scavenge new weapons from your missions, you'll find them lovingly displayed as new additions to your collection back at your inconspicuous base out of Sicily. While you can then select which weapons to bring with you on a new assignment, you can't just lug everything around. In particular, you can only carry a single rifle at a time, and these bulky weapons can't be concealed

Concealment, of course, is critical to 47's success. As in the first Hitman, in the sequel you can relieve just about any killed (or unconscious) male character of his clothing and drag prone bodies out of sight. Donning disguises is handled as strangely as before, meaning one moment you'll be wearing your original outfit and then, moments after selecting the "change clothes" command, you're suddenly wearing a new one as the old one appears neatly folded on the ground. In a game that's generally so believable, this aspect of Hitman 2 comes across as a bit silly--but the fact that you don't have to spend hours looking for a victim who wears the same size of pants that 47 does certainly helps the game play. At any rate, unlike in the original, in Hitman 2 there's more to concealment than just putting on a disguise and then having free rein to walk among your enemies. When the 6-foot, pale-skinned 47 tries to blend in with the locals in India, you'd best believe he'll have to do more than just put on a turban. Generally, you need to stay relatively far away from most passersby if you want your disguise to work, and you need to act casually.

This creates some tense situations. Enemy guards will eye you warily and may decide to confront you if you're acting strangely. Their cold stares will often leave you feeling unsettled as you try to walk--not run--through an enemy-infested area as quickly as you can. Yes, 47 can run tirelessly, but doing so generates noise and also rouses a lot of suspicion, making running impractical for most situations requiring stealth. Fortunately, 47 can also walk, sneak, and crawl. Sneaking and crawling are silent, and 47 can aim sniper rifles more steadily from a crouched position. The thing is, these other means of movement can seem excruciatingly slow compared with running, and realistic though this may be, you'll have to practice a lot before you can successfully sneak up behind an opponent.
The game does a pretty good job of teaching and explaining all the control mechanics to you early on and in the context of the story--see, 47's employer wants to make sure he hasn't gotten rusty and so offers him a quick refresher course. The fact that most of Hitman 2's controls will be instantly accessible to anyone who's played any recent shooter speaks to how greatly the designers have improved the sequel's controls since the original. Suffice it to say that all the original game's control problems are gone and that Hitman 2 basically controls just like your typical first-person shooter. The main difference is in the presence of an easy-to-use context-sensitive menu, which lets you do things like pick locks, put on disguises, climb through windows, grab useful items, and so on.
The original game's extremely steep learning curve isn't nearly as insurmountable in the sequel, since at normal difficulty, 47 can sustain massive amounts of damage (thanks to good old genetic engineering) and can still finish most missions if he blows his cover. Also, the fact that you can save your progress during missions certainly helps: Seven saves are available per mission at normal difficulty and two at expert, though none are available at professional, the toughest setting. The professional setting offers an additional challenge in that the real-time area map you have constant access to will not reveal enemy positions, whereas on normal and expert, you'll see incoming enemies as blips on this screen. Also, aiming is noticeably more erratic at the two tougher settings--you'll need to manually compensate for your weapons' recoil, which actually makes the weapons seem to pack more of a punch. At any rate, between the multiple difficulty settings and the game's end-of-mission ranking system that rewards you for staying stealthy, and of course the inherently open-ended design of the missions, you may find that Hitman 2 has a lot more longevity than most other single-player action games these days.
Hitman 2 certainly looks superb, on every platform. Sure enough, the game looks its best on a high-end PC, though the Xbox version is about as good, and the PlayStation 2 version also looks great. While the game does look similar in many ways to its predecessor, its slick, polished graphical presentation stands up to the very best of what the genre has to offer. Crisp, colorful textures are used to bring both the game's indoor and outdoor settings to life, though textures in the outdoor environments can seem a bit repetitive. Weapons are all rendered with meticulous detail, down to alternate reload animations depending on whether you're playing from the third-person or first-person view. You also won't see a great deal of variety in the character models in each level, though all characters are motion-captured to lifelike perfection. You'll appreciate that many of the characters in the game do have a distinctly unique appearance, and you'll really enjoy the game's stylish cutscenes, which often take the form of surveillance footage taken of 47's targets. In one remarkable mission, you'll have nothing to go on but an old black and white video of the target as a young child.
Yet perhaps the most notable aspect of Hitman 2's graphics is its use of what's now commonly known as "rag doll physics," meaning that characters don't die in any prescripted fashion, but rather go limp as they're struck by the simulated force of your firepower. Sometimes this effect is amazing, like when you blast a ninja from out of the rafters and watch him tumble to the ground or when you take out an enemy sniper and see him slump dead over a railing. At other times, the rag doll effect lives up to its name, and you'll see a foe go flopping end over end in a manner that's more comical than anything else. All in all, it's still a very cool effect, though those who played the original Hitman might wish that it were refined more for the sequel.

To download this game you surely have to follow this steps:-
  • go to the link given below said that 'click here to download 
  • you must need a Google account you are downloading it from my Google drive 
  • type your g mail address and password if you are already logged in don't mention it.
  • Right click the file you want to download and select the downloading option
                   ENJOY!!!!


                                               To Download the game             Click Here


Thursday, 6 March 2014

Plants vs Zombies for PC

                         Plants vs Zombies for PC

            Plant vs Zombie is first released in IOS and in Android and then released in the Xbox series.
Now the Plants vs Zombies is also available in PC
In this game your main objective is to protect your house from the Zombie at all cost. Setup your plant army against the zombie to protect your house. You will get plants when only you get a specific sunlight only. You have to get or produce sunlight by the help of some sunflower in the game. You will get many types of plants like peashooter, double peashooters, freezing peashooters etc.....



  • To download the game just go to the link and sign in through g mail or just type your g mail address if it ask don't worry it is just an g mail log in conformation   
  • right click the file and select the download button


                                                                   Click Here To Download

Wednesday, 5 March 2014

fruit Ninja for PC only 74.4 MB

            Fruit Ninja for PC HD only 74.4 MB

This game is an entertaining and challenging game for the kids and older once. All you only need is a mouse and some fruit killing skills.
different types of blades are available in this game but, they are all locked. At first you will only have the original blade. By completing the side missions of the blade, then only you can unlock the blades there so many blade eg:- piano blade, disco blade, the old glory blade etc..... 
And there are 3 different types of the modes are available in the Fruit Ninja. They are the classic, the arcade mode and the zen mode
The game makers are also added some crazy and amazing facts about the fruits. And they will be seen at end of the game when they displays your game results or the points. This will give you the Knowledge about the fruits and only some rare people only knows it you can even foul you r friends by asking questions about it.
By all  this the FRUIT NINJA is an AMAZING GAME 
just right click the rar file and click the download button to download it

Wednesday, 26 February 2014

Subway Surfers for PC

                          Subway surfers For PC 

Subway surfers for PC is an great entertaining game which has the same story of the subway surfer in smart phones that the police is chasing a naughty guy which is painting all over the train. It is just like the angry birds in PC. by swiping the mouse by clicking the left mouse button. the main aim is to collect as much gold coins and points you can get this game will work in any low leveled PC. to download this just follow the old dmonx style downloading.The only complaint in this game is that when we play the subway surfers for PC it will more effect on the mouse. For example by clicking the left button of the mouse it will have the effect of 2 clicking. And other disappointing thing is that the key for giving you the second chance in the same game-play and the limited edition characters are cut offed. But don't worry this game has is also an entrtaining game with out those thing.

                                    Click here to download


Wednesday, 19 February 2014

Windows 7 Loader Download

           Windows 7 loader free download 2.00 MB 

window 7 loader is an hack software to remove the text at the right down corner of your screen. 
and give you a perfect window 7 ultimate or any versions of windows 7 if your current windows 7 is duplicate. Dmonx is now also launching the second software. if you  suggest to upload more games or software's  then more and more software's and games will be uploaded by DmonX Games. 

to download this software just follow this steps:-

step 1: go to the link given below 
step 2: Google drive will open [you must have an gmail account , you must type your gmail address and password . don't worry about that it is just an log in conformation]
step 3: right click the rar file and there will be an option called download click it 
and it will start downloading




Tuesday, 18 February 2014

Swift Shader 3.0 DOWNLOAD

                                    Swiftshader 3.0 

 Hello guys DmonX games is now giving  swiftshader 3.0. The Swiftshader is a software renders all the GPU process into CPU. But result in low FPS. however some games will work stable in swiftshader. New version of swift shader is released that can emulate the pixel shading 3.0. Swiftshader work a bit stable than the swiftshader  2.0  
To download this game just follow this steps:-
step 1: go to the link given below 
step 2: Google drive will open [you must have an gmail account , you must type your gmail address and password . don't worry about that it is just an log in conformation]
step 3: right click the rar file and there will be an option called download click it 
and it will start downloading

and if you have any doubt for downloading this software 
Just go to 
                            http://www.youtube.com/my_videos?o=U
                                                         
                                                            ENJOY!!!