WWE Fantasy Booking – First Raw Show


Welcome to the world of fantasy wrestling booking as Pete fires up Total Extreme Wrestling 2016 to simulate what could happen in the WWE Universe going through Fastlane and WrestleMania.  At first we’re generally sticking to real-life feuds and upcoming matches before ultimately going off in our own direction, so if you have any ideas or requests let us know in the comments.

We’re beginning with Monday Night Raw in week 1 of February, starting off feuds between Roman Reigns and Braun Strowman, Kevin Owens and Goldberg and much more.

The Book of Metal – WWE Triple Triad


The Book of Metal is Pete’s first real attempt at creating a video game through RPG Maker VX Ace, and the idea behind The Book of Metal is that metal itself has been stolen in the form of a book and it’s up to our heroes to claim it back.

Triple Triad is a game I wanted to add from the beginning but not directly rip off the Final Fantasy 8 version, so I decided to make it based on WWE and NXT Superstars.  So for fans of RPGs, Triple Triad, metal music and professional wrestling (which is a niche audience, but hey) this is something you’ll hopefully enjoy.

Why Do Game Developers No Longer Give Any Info On Their Newest Games?


imagePeteI used the love the thrill of reading through a magazine as a child to find out all the latest news on an upcoming game.  How it was being developed, what features were being included, when it was being released.  I’d hang on every word about how it would revolutionize a console or become the start of a next big franchise, and then a few months later read an in-depth review in the weeks leading up to the big day, with a final score rating of 9/10.  I’d ingested enough information by that point to know that I had to have this particular game, so I took my pocket money and slapped a pre-order on that bad boy and come release day I was never disappointed.  Super Mario 64, Civilization II, Gran Turismo, all favourites of my childhood for one reason – I’d done my homework on all of them, because I had my trusty gaming magazines to conduct my research.

I miss that thrill.  It doesn’t exist anymore and not because commercial Internet all but wiped out gaming magazines as a few still exist, but because the information simply isn’t there anymore.  Gone are the days of extensive previews, new pieces of news filtering out of the developers office every week in the buildup to a release, now everything is all hush-hush to the point where at times I know very little about a game until I actually play it.

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