Skip to main content

Lost Planet 3 Now Available on PlayStation 3, Xbox 360 and PC

Developer Spark Unlimited and publisher Capcom has announced the release of their highly anticipated third-person shoooter, Lost Planet 3, on PlayStation 3, Xbox 360 and PC. The new game is the third in the famous Lost Planet series, but it actually takes fans back to the first human settlement on the newly discovered and mysterious planet of E.D.N. III with a new protagonist named Jim Peyton (voiced by William Watterson).

The new game shows the origins of humans settling on the planet for the first time and learning to survive in its harsh environments. The game also recounts the discovery of the valuable Thermal Energy the planet houses as well as the deadly enemy that would later be known as the Akrid. The exciting third-person shooter allows players to battle in first-person modes while riding in mechs or battle it out on foot with firearms and melee attacks in both single player and multiplayer modes for up to 10 players. Fans of the series will also be able to purchase and download the official Lost Planet 3 soundtrack from Amazon starting today and coming soon to iTunes. Pick up your copy of Lost Planet 3 today and survive the most extreme conditions in gaming!

Lost Planet 3 is now available from all major retailers for the MSRP of $59.99 and can be purchased for PlayStation 3, Xbox 360 and PC. Lost Planet 3 is rated T by the ESRB for Blood, Mild Language & Violence. For more information on the game, check out the official Lost Planet 3 website.


Popular posts from this blog

Haymaker: VR Brawling, Up Close - Authentic, physics‑first combat that turns your body into the controller. (Game Review)

Haymaker is a physics‑first VR brawler in active Early Access that prioritizes authentic, body‑driven melee and high replayability. Its core systems are already playable: weighty, physics‑based hand interactions for grabbing, grappling, and striking; gesture‑driven kicks and knees that reward full‑body motion; adaptive AI that reads and reacts to the battlefield; and sandbox encounters that encourage improvisation with props and environment. Many systems remain in prototype; levels, progression loops, and some modes are still being shaped, but the mechanical foundation is solid and satisfying. The studio is deliberately using Early Access as a development lab: player feedback will guide tuning, bug fixes, and content expansion, so the game you play now is a promising glimpse of a more polished, content‑rich brawler to come. Core systems and combat • Physics‑driven hands : Interactions are governed by a weight‑aware physics model that responds to force, angle, and momentum; so grabs, h...

Letter Lost: Postmarked Secrets - A cozy post office that hides rules and a deeper mystery. (Demo Preview)

Letter Lost drops you into the Kharnym Isle Post Office as its sole employee, tasked with the deceptively simple work of stamping, sorting, and dispatching the island’s mail. On the surface it’s a cozy workplace sim; polite locals, daily pay, and mandatory room and board that removes the hassle of commuting, but the office’s cheery routine is threaded with odd rules and quiet contradictions that quickly make the ordinary feel off‑kilter. What begins as a satisfying loop of weighing parcels and matching stamps soon becomes a game of attention: letters hide hints, patrons’ small talk slips into unsettling confessions, and management’s insistence that you never leave the premises reads less like policy and more like a warning. The demo covers your first four days on the job, teaching the systems while nudging you toward choices, obey protocol and keep the peace, or pry at the seams and uncover the post office’s darker purpose. Either way, those first shifts are a careful, uncanny invitat...

550 Geese Killed at the Request of an HOA — And the Question We Can’t Ignore

In Madison, Alabama, more than 550 geese were captured and killed in a single coordinated operation carried out by USDA Wildlife Services at the request of a homeowners association. What was described as a “population control effort” has ignited a deeper and far more uncomfortable conversation: When did wildlife become something we simply remove when it becomes inconvenient? According to reports from the Heritage Plantation HOA, the geese population had grown to levels they claimed were “five times” what was considered sustainable for the area. The association said it had spent years attempting non-lethal methods, including deterrents and egg management strategies, before ultimately requesting a full-scale cull approved under federal wildlife guidelines. Nine USDA agents carried out the operation. Within a single night, hundreds of birds that had been living, nesting, and raising young in the community were gone. The HOA cited concerns about sanitation, water quality, and public health...