

There's also a stronger narrative that toes the line well.
#Crackdown 3 twitter Pc
On a PC build I got to experience the campaign, which has a pretty simple premise: what if the original Crackdown, but better? I fully intend to write a more in-depth little look at the campaign in the near future alongside a video to match, but all you really need to know is that Crackdown 3 offers the same sort of madness as the first game but with a broader range of enemies and weapons within a larger city sandbox. On Xbox One X over an hour's worth of games were spent in Wrecking Zone, the new multiplayer mode that deploys the cloud technology I was so bowled over by back in 2015. "The nature of the mode means it takes place on more limited, enclosed maps with a stringent time limit, so the promise of being able to collapse a building and watch it topple into another to cause a domino effect simply can't be achieved."Īt preview I got to play a solid chunk of the two sides of Crackdown 3. However, the cuts made and time taken to do so is likely to be debated for months.
#Crackdown 3 twitter series
But, as it finally nears release it does appear the Crackdown series has reclaimed its soul. Developers departing, followed by hefty delays and some very disappointing demos. It's fair to say that Crackdown 3 has had a rocky development. For inspiration, I look back at the first time I saw that game, a behind-closed-doors trade show demo of the impressive destruction technology powering the game's impressive new building collapsing technology. It would be easy to undersell and equally simple to oversell.

The IFJ said: “The Chinese Government’s crackdown of the online sphere has become an ongoing attack on freedom of expression and speech, and is a blatant attempt by the government to control the public narrative.Compiling my thoughts on Crackdown 3 after a few hours of hands-on time is difficult. The Administration also said that the deleted accounts ‘trampled on the dignity of laws and regulations and damaged the ecology of online public opinion’. Both platforms were given ‘serious warnings’ over their ‘irresponsibility and lax management’. The latest government-led campaign was launched on October 20, and include accounts belonging to ‘a popular talk show celebrity, an entertainment blogger who shared film footage, online influencers commenting on social issues and bloggers writing extensively on ethnicity’.Īs part of the crackdown, the Cyberspace Administration summoned representatives of Weibo and Wechat over their management of the platforms. The latest crackdown comes, despite Twitter being blocked by the ‘Great Firewall’ in China and uses having to use VPNs to access it.Īt the same time, the South China Morning Post reported that nearly 10,000 social media accounts had been shut down in just three weeks under a new government campaign. Wu’s account had more than 30,000 posts, and he was jailed in December 2017 for subversion.

On November 17, China Change reported that the Twitter account of Chinese activist Wu Gan was suddenly deleted. HKFP reported that Yaxue Cao, founder of the human rights site, China Change, was referring to the action as a ‘silent slaughter’.
#Crackdown 3 twitter free
According to Hong Kong Free Press (HKFP) activists in China have been pressured by police to delete sensitive tweets, and in other instances there have been reports of the authorities gaining access to accounts and shutting them down.
