Crackdown 3

Crackdown 3 has finally arrived on Xbox One and PC and takes place after the events of CD 2 which was first released nine years ago in 2010. The new installment has been created by Publisher Xbox Game Studios and Developer Sumo Digital and follows the story of Commander Jaxon who along with the Agents need to save the City of New Providence from unknown enemies. DeveloperReAgent Games. Release DateFebruary 15, 2019. PlatformsPC, Xbox One. Review Gamestop.

Time to step up your boom and stop crime as a super-powered Agent in Crackdown 3's open-world sandbox of mayhem and destruction. Explore the heights of New Providence, tear up the streets in iconic vehicles, and use your powerful abilities to stop a ruthless criminal empire. Play the campaign solo or with a friend in co-op mode or compete in the all-new “Wrecking Zone,” a multiplayer mode where destruction is your ultimate weapon.

Choose where he goes, but choose wisely. There is a guy called WireHead whose actions can be controlled by remote control. Wirehead sega cd rom. It has a very unusual premise behind it. When the government goes after him, you must save him from an early demise. One wrong move and WireHead dies.The video is full screen, and it doesn't look too pixilized when it's in motion.

Like most kids who came of age in the '80s and '90s, Terry Crews grew up loving video games. For him, that meant first-generation systems like the Atari, or gathering all the quarters he could carry and heading down to the arcade to see who could keep Pac-Man alive the longest. ('That story always ended in tragedy,' he laughs.)And like a lot of those kids, he aged out. At a certain point, joysticks just don't have the same appeal as social lives, significant others, and other after-school activities. Crews went on to have a successful career in the NFL, which was followed by a second, maybe even third, act as an actor, comedian,.

He's also a devoted husband and father. But with this month's release of the long-anticipated Crackdown 3, Crews is getting back into video games.

Crews plays Commander Jaxon, a super-powered Agent tasked with getting payback on the baddies of the mysterious Terra Nova. And you, the player, play as Crews' Jaxon (and a handful of other Agents fighting by his side). All that's left to do from there is wipe out everything in sight.The actor talked to Esquire.com about Crackdown 3, what it's like to work with a motion capture suit on, and why he thinks video games are the future of entertainment.The arcade was everything to him as a kid.First of all, I'm a child of the '80s.

I am a video game nut. I came up in it. I would go to the arcade with a pocketful of coins, and that was it. I would spend my whole allowance, all the money I earned doing lawns, I would spend that in the arcade.

Then you grow up, you play in the NFL for a little while (laughs), and you kind of lose it. His son reignited his interest in gaming.I thought he was playing a video game and he was like, 'No, dad, I'm watching so-and-so play.' It was crazy. He would literally watch the gameplay as if he was watching a TV show. That's when it hit me like, I'm out of this thing. I'm not getting it.

I told him, 'I really wanna get into your world, I wanna understand what this is,' and, well, I watch 'em now. I learned that he was learning to play, basically, and when he gets on he understands what's coming up—he gets it.

Now we love to play games. Fortnite is fun. He's killed me many times on PUBG. It's like, 'Man what are you doing? I'm your father, how could you do this?' It keeps me young again.

He shot an ad for Crackdown 3 before becoming an actual character.It was just a a couple years ago. And when we did it, I was like, man, I would love to be in this game. I made no bones about the fact that I wanted to be in video games.

And it kind of got back—because I think I said it about 15 million times—it got back to Microsoft. Metal slug defense cheats. It was like a marriage made in heaven. Shooting motion capture was a new challenge for him as an actor.I use props. I love to grab something. Even on Brooklyn Nine-Nine, I'm at my desk, I use that as a prop.

You almost remember your lines by what thing you can grab, or where you stand, or what position you're in. The thing about motion capture is that you're in a big empty room. Everything is in your imagination, and that's really hard! Actors now are used to doing green screen, but even then, you have props. This is like five people yelling—'You're in a hallway!' 'You're coming down!' 'You're gonna press the button!'

—I was like, OH MY GOD. Then you get in the car afterwards like, I hope I did it right? But he can't wait to do it again.It was a really extensive, beautiful process, and I loved every second of it. And now I have another skillset that I can use in my repertoire again, just bust that imagination wide open. People were talking Mortal Kombat, me playing Jax and stuff, putting me in that. I just wanna do more.

Literally, what.