Monday, May 19, 2014

Watch Dogs Accessories

If you want every piece of DLC and physical swag that Ubisoft is offering, you're SOL if you're outside of Europe. You'll need to purchase two special editions, the Dedsec Edition (£89.99, or USD $151.47) and the Vigilante Edition (£109.99, or USD $185.14) as well as the season pass ($19.99). The PlayStation 3 and PlayStation 4 versions come with exclusive content — the White Hat pack featuring a swanky white coat for Aiden and 60 extra minutes of gameplay — so you'll want to buy for one of those consoles.


You can't get by without the season pass either, because only through the pass can you access the T-Bone single-player campaign and Conspiracy Mode DLC. This totals $356.60 and players walk away with two copies of the game, two copies of the soundtrack and two Aiden masks, as well as doubles of codes for some add-on item packs.

The two pieces of season pass DLC, the T-Bone campaign and Conspiracy Mode, will continue to be problematic to obtain for non-North American players, as the season pass is the only way to obtain them — they are not included in any special editions.

Players in Australia and New Zealand get an additional piece of DLC unavailable in other territories — the Chicago South Club Pack. This is only obtainable in the ANZ Special Edition ($84.04), which brings Australian players' tally up to USD $440.64 if they want to collect all DLC. They also walk away with two extra copies of the game to give away or trade in.



Why Watch Dogs went into hiding

In order to get all physical goods and DLC in North America, players need to purchase for a Sony platform to get that sweet exclusive DLC. Buying the Limited Edition ($129.99) plus the season pass nets you everything for $149.98. You'll get all DLC packs and the two season pass segments, as well as special packaging for the game, a copy of the soundtrack, Aiden's mask, an Aiden figurine and a steelbook case. You also get only one copy of the game and don't have to bother yourself with trade-ins.

North American players, unfortunately, miss out on some of the grander Watch Dogs swag. In this region, no collectors edition includes the map of Chicago, Aiden Pearce's hat, the four augmented reality cards and three decorative badges. Europe has the big juicy collectors editions, while NA versions seem more focused on playable content.

If you're only interested in the game and its DLC, you have two options that cost the same in North America. Purchasing the downloadable version off the PlayStation Network for either PS3 and PS4, or purchasing a standard edition for a Sony platform with a season pass. Both these options cost $79.99 and are the least fussy way to get all in-game content.

None of the above applies to the Wii U version, which is at this time is still in limbo.


How to cash in those extra Dogs

So, European and Australian players, about returning those extra copies of Watch Dogs: unless you're feeling generous and want to invite your less-financially-flexible friends to join you in Chicago, you'll want to recoup some of that cash. If you're in Europe you have one extra copy if you went for the all-DLC plan, and two extra copies if you're in Australia.

GAME U.K. offers options to trade in games for store credit or sell them back for cash. For the purpose of this analysis, I used three recent games, considering you'll be trading in those Watch Dogs copies shortly after release: Titanfall, Dark Souls 2 and Thief.  You can get £22.00 trade in credit or £15.40 in cold cash back for Titanfall, £36.00 trade in or £25.20 cash for adding Dark Souls 2 and £52.00 trade in or £37.20 cash with Thief. Averaging this out, you can expect somewhere around £36.66 (USD $61.78) in store credit or £25.93 (USD $ 43.69) cash for your extra Dogs.

Using these same three games as a reference, you can get around of £18.05 (USD $30.38) through the Amazon U.K. trade-in program, while GameStop U.K. and EB Games U.K. and Australia all take trade-ins and second-hand sales on a case-by-case basis. However, given GameStop's notoriously low trade-back values, going through GAME for cash or store credit looks like your best bet.

Luckily for North America players, they won't have to deal with any trade-ins.


This sounds familiar ...

The Watch Dogs DLC bonanza isn't Ubisoft's first rodeo with edition-specific bonus content. In 2012, Assassin's Creed 3 had a PC special edition that included all DLC packs, but Ubisoft still offered other collectors editions mixing and matching some digital content with physical goods — like a statue of protagonist Connor Kenway. Last year, Assassin's Creed 4 had a slew of retailer-specific DLC — costumes, bonus missions, new guns, you name it — as well as a set of PlayStation platform-exclusive missions featuring Aveline, the lead of PlayStation Vita title Assassin's Creed Liberation.

But for Assassin's Creed 4, Ubisoft strove to tie bonus in-game content to the purchase of physical goods; one example of this is bundling codes for additional in-game outfits with McFarlane Toys' Assassin's Creed figurines. Some cosmetic DLC, like the costumes and extra guns, required two or three save files from previous Assassin's Creed games. These save files also had to be registered to a UPlay account, furthering racking up the number of hoops players needed to jump through to obtain all DLC.

Watch Dogs is also not the first game to receive swag-heavy editions exclusive to Europe. Assassin's Creed 4 had Europe-only versions bundled with artbooks and elaborate dioramas — four of them, to be exact. More recently, JRPG-inspired Child of Light was released as a downloadable title in North America, while Europe got a physical collectors edition with goods like artwork and the soundtrack.

To sum it all up, you'll be spending more money to obtain all DLC and swag if you're in Europe. Fortunately for players only concerned with playable content, this is the cheapest and easiest mission to accomplish. As for those who really need Aiden's hat — it's time to make some friends in Australia.



Visit this site :

http://wearedata.watchdogs.com/ 


The Game features :


DYNAMIC NAVIGATION: Watch_Dogs gives you the ability to not only use the city's ctOS to your advantage, but the streets as well. In real-world Chicago, cut through one of the buildings or climb to the rooftops to catch your target.

HACK THE CITY: Control the city's infrastructure, in real time, with Aiden's cell phone. Trap your enemy in a 30-car pileup by manipulating the traffic lights. Stop a train, and then board it to evade the authorities. Narrowly escape capture by quickly raising a drawbridge. Anything connected to the city's CTOS can become your weapon.

HIGH OCTANE DRIVING: Get behind the wheel of more than 65 vehicles bursting with horsepower to explore the massive city while completing missions. Ubisoft Montreal partnered with Ubisoft Reflections, the acclaimed studio behind the award-winning Driver series to develop each vehicle with state-of-art physics and handling.

SEAMLESS MULTIPLAYER EXPERIENCE: Discover a new level of interaction, cooperation and confrontation between players thanks to a brand new multiplayer game system that links the single and multiplayer modes into one seamless experience. That means no menus, no loading screens, just instant open world multiplayer action.

STAY CONNECTED WITH A NEW WAY TO PLAY: Go beyond the console with a ground-breaking, real-time, companion game. This innovative mobile platform allows players to connect and compete with friends, even when away from the home console. The Watch_Dogs companion game delivers dual-screen gameplay that enables you to play from anywhere, at any time.

Saturday, May 17, 2014

Watch Dogs Marketing.

Watch Dogs PC Release Date :


EU Release Date: May-27-2014
US Release Date: May-27-2014
AU Release Date: May-27-2014

Minimum System Requirements :


AMD CPU  :  Phenom II X4 940

Nvidia GPU  :  GeForce GTX 460 768MB

AMD GPU  :  Radeon HD 5770 1024MB

RAM  :  6 GB

OS  :  Win Vista 64

Direct X  :  DX 11

HDD Space  :  20 GB

Recommended System Requirements :


INTEL CPU  :  Core i7-3770 4-Core 3.4GHz

AMD CPU  :  FX-8350

Nvidia GPU  :  GeForce GTX 560 Ti

AMD GPU  :  Radeon HD 7850

RAM  :  8 GB

OS  :  Win 7 64

Direct X  :  DX 11

HDD Space  :  20 GB

Ultra System Requirements :


 INTEL CPU  :  Core i7-4770K 4-Core 3.5GHz

AMD CPU  :  FX-9370

Nvidia GPU  :  GeForce GTX 780

AMD GPU  :  Radeon R9 290

RAM  :  8 GB

OS  :  Win 7 64

Direct X  :  DX 11

HDD Space  :  20 GB


Watch Dogs DLC season pass includes 'unique single player campaign' $20 product also features new playable character and weapons.A Watch Dogs DLC season pass has been revealed by GameStop.According to the retailer, the $19.99 season pass will offer access to a range of Watch Dogs DLC at a discounted price."Stay connected to the world of Watch Dogs with the Watch Dogs Season Pass," reads the product listing. "Get access to a unique single player campaign featuring a new playable character plus more missions, weapons, and exclusive content for $19.99. That's an over 30% savings versus buying each piece separately."The PlayStation versions of the game will also feature one hour of exclusive gameplay accessible via PSN post-launch.Ubisoft recently announced a Watch Dogs release date of May 27 on PS4, PS3, Xbox One, Xbox 360 and PC, with the Wii U version set to launch "at a later date".The open-world game was originally scheduled for release in November 2013, but it was delayed due to quality concerns.In March, a senior figure at Ubisoft Montreal told CVG the studio would have been forced to axe "several" Watch Dogs game systems had the title not been pushed back.Ubisoft's VP of creative, Lionel Raynaud, revealed that the development team even considered saving these specific systems for a Watch Dogs sequel, but ultimately decided that the additional development time required to implement them would be worthwhile.


If you were to purchase every special edition available for Ubisoft's open-world adventure Watch Dogs, you would spend just over $1,240.This includes all region-exclusive editions, such as Australia and New Zealand's ANZ Special Edition and the Europe, Australia and Asia-only Vigilante Edition, the only version that offers a wearable replica of protagonist Aiden Pierce's hat. You come away with 10 copies of the game — and don't forget about the season pass. Of course, you wouldn't be able to play every version because of console region-locking. Watch Dogs' May 27 release date is approaching. Earlier this week people pointed out on Twitter the visual absurdity of the game's Wikipedia page, which sported a now mysteriously missing chart detailing what special editions are available where and what downloadable content and physical goods are available in them. The chart listed nine special editions spread across the globe — four are available in North America, four in Europe and the U.K., three in Australia and New Zealand (including one regional exclusive) and two in the Middle-east and Asia. This doesn't count the retailer-specific pre-order bonuses available with North America's Standard Edition, spread across Amazon, Best Buy, GameStop and WalMart. So how can you get the most for paying the least? It's tricky, and if you're in Europe you have access to more physical Watch Dogs goods, while North American versions make it easier to amass DLC.

Written by-
SHUBHAM KATARA & GAURAV BAZARI.

Wednesday, May 14, 2014

Watch Dogs

Watch Dogs

Watch Dogs is an open world action-adventure video game in which players control a vigilante named Aiden Pearce who can hack into various electronic devices tied to the city's central operating system (CtOS), allowing various methods for the player to solve numerous objectives.Examples include hacking into people's phones to retrieve bank data and steal funds, triggering malfunctions in equipment to distract other characters and hacking into traffic lights to cause collisions. Players can also receive information on civilians via augmented reality feeds, providing theplayer with information on demographics, health, and potential behavior. All of the hacking mechanic is done directly from Pearce's smartphone. He carries around a phone that is equipped with multiple applications, namely the profiler and the crime prevention system, but also applications that interact more directly with the environment around Pearce - interfering with mobile communications, traffic lights, etc. Objectives showcased in presentations include finding specific targets to kill, evading the police and following potential victims in order to stop their would-be killers. Combat utilizes a combination  of stealth components and parkour, along with the mechanics of a cover-based third-person shooter.



Hacking

The core game mechanic in Watch Dogs is hacking. Aiden Pearce, the game's protagonist, is armed with a smartphone loaded with applications capable of hacking a major part of Chicago's infrastructure, such as traffic lights, bridges, steam pipes, fuse boxes, road blockers, etc. This phone is reportedly capable of over 100 total hacks. Hacking is one of the most heavily marketed features of the game, and is central to both gameplay and plot. Through his profiler application, Aiden Pearce is able to access chunks of information on every citizen of Chicago he meets at any given time. His smartphone  is connected to the CtOS populace database, meaning he can learn people's age and occupation as well as small personal facts about them. Pearce is also capable of reading randomly generated text messages and of overhearing phone calls between two NPC's. These will sometimes lead him to new, unscripted missions. This gameplay feature was designed to make the world of Watch Dogs feel more alive and real, giving depth to the city of Chicago and its people.Additionally, Pearce's smartphone is constantly connected to the CtOS crime prevention system, a fictional tool originally designed for use by the Chicago Police Department. It notifies him when a crime is likely to occur in his vicinity, giving the player a chance to intervene and stop the crime. This contributes to Pearce's vigilante persona. Because of the fact that Watch Dogs' interpretation of Chicago is governed entirely by the Central Operating System  (CtOS), Aiden Pearce has the power to remotely access and interact with things present in his environment - examples of this are traffic lights, steam pipes , blockers, and even the city's lights. He can use these in combat situations to eliminate opponents, create diversions or create cover. He can also use them as a stealth tool to sneak by guards.


Plot

The storyline of Watch Dogs game is built around the concept of information warfare, data being interconnected, and the world's increasing use of technology questioning who exactly runs the computers they depend on. The game is set in an alternate reality version of Chicago, Illinois, which is one of many cities to feature a supercomputer known as a "ctOS" (Central Operating System). The system controls every piece of technology in the city, and contains information on all of the city's residents and activities which can be used for various purposes. In the game's universe, the Northeast blackout of 2003 was found to be caused by a hacker, prompting the development of the ctOS. The game will put the player in control of Aiden Pearce, a highly skilled hacker and former thug. Due to a "violent family tragedy", Aiden seeks to bring his own form of justice to the culprits through the ctOS. The creative director of Watch Dogs stated that the main story will be 35–40 hours long.