Ghost-Recon-2

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  • Ghost Recon: Future Soldier trailer has intel inside

    by 
    Richard Mitchell
    Richard Mitchell
    08.19.2011

    Listen, there's intel in Ghost Recon: Future Soldier. Like, so much intel. Your team has intel. The opposing team has intel. Even the intel has intel. At least, we think it does. Watch this trailer and see if it clears things up.

  • Steamy Ghost Recon savings, 50% off the Complete Pack

    by 
    Dustin Burg
    Dustin Burg
    02.07.2009

    This is not a drill. Keep your head low, your wallets open and your Steam account information at the ready, because this is an official weekend deal alert: The Ghost Recon Complete Pack is 50% off through Steam. For only $19.99 or roughly the cost of Tom Clancy's Fighter Wing guide, you can be the proud owner of all five PC versions of the Ghost Recon series including the original, Island Thunder, Desert Siege, GRAW and the latest installment, GRAW2. The money savings will expire prior to Monday, so make your "should I buy?" or "should I pass" decision in a timely manner. Please, try to keep an orderly line so the cashier can smoothly operate the checkout lane.

  • South Korea loosens game censorship

    by 
    Justin Murray
    Justin Murray
    12.29.2006

    Game censorship is a big news item in the past few months. Political types of all walks of life enjoy trying to stifle the medium by passing laws that don't hold up in court in the US and even get through without much of a hitch in Europe. On the other side of the world, one nation is going the opposite direction. South Korea, which recently proposed an anti-gold farming bill, has pulled censorship on games depicting military action against their northern neighbor. Under the ban, any game that was negative toward North Korea was not permitted for sale in the South, citing they would only inflame the existing tension. However, wiser South Korean lawmakers finally realized video games have little impact on the real world, cut the rule and games like Ghost Recon 2 can now be sold. Lawmakers from the West take note; South Korea has the right idea. When they're sitting right next to an unstable tin-pot dictator and decide that games aren't going to cause a mass invasion, we should start reassessing this whole "games make people violent" kick. Our only hope is wiser people end up in leadership positions who actually try to solve problems instead of deflecting the responsibility on an unrelated party.