Maybe the only way to make the Oakland Raiders’ season interesting past the sixth week would be to force them – and every other wretched team – to play for the right to stay in the National Football League.
Some portion of the £200M that Grand Theft Auto IV is projected to earn will find its way into the treasury of the U.K.’s world-renowned Oxford University. That’s because the game’s Euphoria engine was developed by two Oxford students using research at Oxford’s zoology department.
The university’s technology transfer company then teamed up with Natural Motion, the company the two students, Torsten Reil and Colm Massey, created to build and sell the engine. As such Oxford retains a share in anything Euphoria and Natural Motion should earn down the road. Such as … Star Wars: The Force Unleashed.
newVideoPlayer("Backbreaker_gawker_001.flv", 494, 300,""); While I’m not the biggest sports fan, I’m always on the lookout for a new football game that will pull me back into the genre that I once enjoyed. Natural Motion (the company behind the lauded Euphoria engine from GTA IV and The Force Unleashed) is getting a lot of press for its dynamic, body-crashing AI in its upcoming football game, Backbreaker. And while all that looks fantastic in this new clip, I hope that the Flash compression hasn’t ruined the beauty of the gigantic, hyperreal stadium in the background. God bless bloom lighting.