Games we play


Not all members have all games but these are the games that are owned by enough members to enable us to play together at times, in other words, all members have at least some of these games. In addition to this we also have the odd online poker night.

Cover Game Screenshot
Red Orchestra 2: Heroes of Stalingrad

Red Orchestra 2: Heroes of Stalingrad

Focusing on the Battle of Stalingrad and the surrounding operations, both German and Russian, from July 1942 to February 1943, Heroes of Stalingrad allows the player to experience one of the most brutal battles in all of human history. For the first time ever in a first person shooter gamers will be able to experience WWII from the Axis side in a German single player campaign. Powered by Unreal Engine 3, Red Orchestra 2: Heroes of Stalingrad aims to deliver unrivalled accuracy and attention to detail, along with gritty, vicious combat in multi-player, co-op and solo modes, although the only mode for offline players is the shooting ranges and assault courses, in which to hone one’s skills.

Red Orchestra 2: Heroes of Stalingrad
F.E.A.R.

F.E.A.R.

Free games are awesome, its even better when they are actually fun. FEAR Combat has to be one of the best multi-player experiences ever had in it's day. The graphics are still good today, the particle effects are good and best of all... its free. The game has a good collection of maps and weapons to choose from. Ranging from your duel pistols to some powerful Rifles. There is nothing better than to pin someone to a wall with a penetrator or hold your weapon for a unarmed attack with the gun butt and kick your enemy and watch their limp body fly over a railing, sending them to their death. This game has provided us with hours of fun and nearly seven years later, we are still playing it! You can download the game and patches from our Downloads Section.

F.E.A.R.
Team Fortress 2

Team Fortress 2

Team Fortress 2 just got better... It got Free! No, it didn't escape, we mean it's now free to play. Team Fortress 2 has nine character classes: Spy, Pyro, Soldier, Heavy, Medic, Sniper, Demoman, Scout and Engineer. Each class has roughly three main ways of attacking - a primary weapon (the Heavy's minigun, Pyro's flamethrower, Engineer's sentry gun, etc.) and secondary (various classes have shotguns, others pistols, while the Demoman has a highly effective mine thrower) and melee weapons (the Scout's bat, the Medic's bonesaw, and so on). Each class has a very clearly defined role and the means to ensure they perform successfully. The only limiting factor is, of course, how effectively your team meshes together.

Team Fortress 2
Call of Duty 4: Modern Warfare

Call of Duty 4: Modern Warfare

Class-based multiplayer is nothing new, but it seems to quickly be turning into a staple of first-person shooters. Call of Duty 4: Modern Combat is yet another in the growing cast of shooters to use a class-based system. However, COD4 does things a touch differently. Using a persistent experience-based system, players aren't locked into any specific "role" that limits in any way their ability to hunt and kill their opponents. There is no engineer or medic or heavy gunner. The classes are much more dynamic than you may expect. Classes determine your starting weapon, sidearm, and special grenade. It also indicates your three special skills, called perks. But none of these force you into a particular role or stifle in any way your ability to enjoy the sixteen maps in Modern Warfare.

Call of Duty 4: Modern Warfare
Battlefield: Bad Company 2

Battlefield: Bad Company 2

The action kicks in with nearly fully destructible environments. If an enemy soldier is holed up in a second-story bedroom taking pot-shots at you, all you have to do is send a rocket at that wall and he'll either wind up dead or fully exposed. The same line of thinking applies to just about anything you see – send enough fire-power at it and you can watch it crumble. It shouldn't come as any surprise that this game has some great mechanics. The guns react well, and sound fantastic. The vehicles handle smoothly and really do a great job of making you feel like the king of the battlefield. The instant-re-spawns and med kit jabs of the last Bad Company replaced by the more standard checkpoints and regenerative health bar and that makes the challenge of war feel more realistic.

Battlefield: Bad Company 2
Unreal Tournament 3

Unreal Tournament 3

Epic's Unreal Tournament 3, actually the fourth version of the series on PC, represents a blend of progressive and old-school elements. It's a nod to fans of the original UT, released in 1999, with the return of weapons like the impact hammer and enforcer, which replace bits of the arsenal from UT 2004 like the shield gun, lightning gun, and assault rifle. Moving beyond the ballistic load out, we see Epic pushing forward their most distinct draw, the warfare mode, an augmented version of UT 2004's onslaught. While so much of this game will feel familiar to series veterans, particularly in the death-match and team death-match modes, it's with the vehicular, large-scale combat that UT 3 makes its largest strides forward, delivering to fans gorgeous graphics and great action.

Unreal Tournament 3
Racedriver's GRID

Racedriver's GRID

Grid splits its racing between three geographical locations, with Europe, the US, and Japan each presenting an assortment of racing styles. Europe features track-based racing, with famous locations such as the Nurburgring, Donington Park, and Le Mans on its roster. Europe also boasts a city track in Milan, but it's the US that is more focused on street racing with courses in Washington, San Francisco, Detroit, and more. Japan is clearly influenced by underground street racing and has short, winding tracks that are perfect for drifting around. Each of these locations demands different vehicles; Europe features touring and GT cars, the US has muscle cars such as Vipers and Mustangs, and in Japan you get to drive tricked-out Nissan’s and Subaru’s.

Racedriver's GRID
Grand Theft Auto IV

Grand Theft Auto IV

Steal and drive a variety of vehicles, including auto-mobiles, boats, helicopters, and motorcycles. Walk, run, jump, climb over obstacles and swim, as well as use weapons and perform basic hand-to-hand combat. blow up cop cars, run down innocent civilians, bang hookers, assist drug dealers and do many, many other bad deeds.

Grand Theft Auto IV
Burnout Paradise

Burnout Paradise

The city is the lobby, you can just mess around and do whatever you like. When hosting, you have the ability to both race and take on challenges. Races are of your own design, with you setting the beginning and ending points anywhere in the city. Challenges are set, and there are literally hundreds of them. The challenges range from competitive bouts of drifting, crashing, and jumping to cooperative versions of all the same stuff. It's an inventive mode to be sure and an exceptionally fun one when you've got a good crew of friends to play with. Paradise's visual presentation is top-notch work. This game is lightning fast and the car crashes in this game are absolutely fantastic, thanks to some dynamite particle effects and camera work in each and every mangled wreck.

Burnout Paradise
Burnout Paradise

FlatOut 2

As much fun as the Burnout series of racing games can be, sometimes you want something a little grittier and grimier than the glossy, pristine-looking races that series offers. FlatOut 2 consists of big, clunky, filthy-looking cars that deform in all sorts of spectacular ways while flying through the air, crashing into one another, and even periodically sending the drivers of said vehicles crashing through the windscreen in a rag-doll-heavy heap. It includes a stunt mode which is fun when played against other people. The guy flying , with extra-ridiculous games where you try to launch him in a high jump, long jump, or even use him as a bowling ball. A basketball game, where you try to drop your guy through one of several available baskets, all with different point totals.

Burnout Paradise

Wherever possible we host the games on our own dedicated server but sadly the Game Industries lack of support for dedicated PC games of late has resulted in seeing many poorly console ported games with either no server files being released or only official licensed ranked ones, however, we live in hope that this trend is bucked soon and we can add more titles.